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REPORT  ON  THE  DEEP-SEA  MADREPORARIA  OF  THE 

SIBOGA-EXPEDITION 


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Sibog  a-Expeditie 

XVI  a 


REPORT  ON  THE  DEEP-SEA  MADREPORARIA 
OF  THE  SIBOGA-EXPEDITION 


BY 


A.    ALCOCK,  M.B.,  LL.D..  F.R.S. 

Indian   Medical   Service,  corresponding  Member  of  the  Zoological   Society   and  Fellow 

of  the  Geological  Society  of  Londoa.   Superintendent  of  the   Indian   Museum 

and   Professor  of  Zoology  and   Comparative   Anatomy   in   the  Medical  College  of  Calcutta. 

Sometime  Surgeon-Katuralist  to  the   Indian  Marine   Survey. 


With   five    plates 


«i=4©{«&= 


late  E.  J.  BRILL 

PUBLISHERS    AND    PRINTERS 

LEYDEN    —    1902 


REPORT  ON  THE  DEEP-SEA  MADREPORARIA 
OF  THE  SIBOGA-EXPEDITION 


BV 


A.  ALCOCK,  M.B.,  LL.D.,  F.R.S. 

Indian   Medical  Service,  corresponding  Member  of  the  Zoological  Society  and  Fellow 

of  the  Geological  Society  of  London.  Superintendent  of  the   Indian   Museum 

and  Professor  of  Zoology   and   Comparative  Anatomy   in   the  Medical  College  of  Calcutta. 

Sometime  Surgeon-Naturalist  to   the   Indian   Marine  Survey. 


With    five     pi  at  es. 


INTRODUCTION. 

YYhen  my  friend  Professor  Max  Weber  suggested  that  I  should  deal  with  the  Deep-sea 
Madreporaria  collected  by  the  "Siboga"  Expedition  in  the  East  Indian  Archipelago,  I  assented 
readily,  because  I  fancied  that  the  species  inhabiting  the  deep  basins  of  that  part  of  the  Oriental 
Region  would  be  much  the  same  as  those  found  in  the  depths  of  the  seas  of  India,  to  which 
I  have  given  some  study.  Had  I  known,  however,  that  the  correspondences  between  represen- 
tative  collections  from  the  deep-seas  of  the  two  regions  would  amount  to  less  than  ten 
per  cent  of  their  sum,  I  should  have  been  much  more  diffident  as  to  my  qualifications  for  the 
proposed  task. 

Another  unexpected  difïïculty,  with  which  I  was  confronted,  was  that  the  "Siboga" 
collection  contained,  along  with  many  forms  that  indisputably  belong  to  the  abysses,  a  large 
number  of  other  "free"  forms  —  such,  e.  g\,  as  the  species  of  Heter  ocyathus,  Heter opsammia, 
and  Balanophyllia  —  which,  though  they  have  no  connexion  with  the  peculiar  fauna  of  the 
deep  sea,  yet  most  emphatically  cannot  be  classed  with  the  reef-forming  corals. 

This  at  once  raised  the  question,  which  I  could  have  been  well  content  to  leave  more 
experienced  zoophytologists  to  discuss,  as  to  where,  in  the  case  of  Corals,  the  limits  of  the 
deep-sea  fauna  should  be  drawn. 

Some    writers    have    avoided    this    difficulty    by    including    as  Deep-sea  Madreporaria  all 


SIBOGA-EXI'EMTIE    XVI  ,7. 


,4753 


those  species  —  for  the  most  part  solitary  in  habit  —  which  do  not  help  to  form  reefs.  Now 
this  simple  method  of  dealing  with  the  matter  may  serve  well  enough  for  some  latitudes,  but 
it  wil!  not  answer  for  tropical  latitudes  where  the  temperature,  even  at  a  depth  of  a  hundred 
fathoms,   is   fairly  high. 

For,  at  any  rate  in  the  Oriental  region,  everyone  who  has  worked  in  the  field  knows 
that,  outside  the  zone  of  reef-forming  corals,  there  are  two  separate  coral  faunas.  One  of  these 
is  a  characteristic  local  assemblage  of  small  solitary  species  of  Ettpsammidce \  Lophoseridce \  and 
Tii,rbinolid(r,  that  flourish  on  shelly  and  shingly  ground  in  depths  of  twenty  to  sixty  fathoms 
or  thereabouts,  where  the  water  is  still  warm  ;  while  the  other  includes  a  number  of  true  cold- 
water  forms  having  decided  afhnities  with  the  corals  living  in  the  depths  of  the  Xorth  Atlantic 
and  with  those  that  inhabited  the   Mediterranean  basin   in   Tertiary  times. 

These  two  assemblages  of  Madreporaria  —  the  one  of  small  tropical  species  that  are 
now  invading  the  depths :  the  other  of  well-established  abyssal  species  having  a  more  northern, 
or  at  any  rate  a  more  cosmopolitan,  cast  —  are  quite  distinct,  even  though  a  few  of  the 
deep-sea  species,  such  for  instance  as  Batkyactis,  do  occasionally  find  their  way  into  shallow  water. 

So  far  as  the  "Siboga"  material  is  concerned,  I  have  ventured,  with  Prof.  Max  Weber's 
assent,  to  settle  the  matter  by  applying  to  the  non-reef-forming  corals  the  same  measures  that 
have  been  found  convenient  for  so  many  other  groups  of  marine  animals,  and  I  have  therefore 
separated,  as  worthy  of  independant  treatment  with  regard  to  questions  of  oceanography,  all 
those  species  that   ordinarily  live   below  the  hundred-fathom  line. 

These  species  are  here  collected  under  the  name  of  Deep-sea  Madreporaria.  The  remainder 
of  the  collection  I  hope  to  deal  with  hereafter  as  "Solitary  Madreporaria  of  the  Prope-littoral  Zone". 

The  number  of  true  deep-sea  species  included  in  the  present  instalment  is  75,  belonging 
to    29  genera  and  subgenera  and  5   families. 

Of  the  species  that  are  sufficiently  well  preserved  for  determination  38  have  never,  to  the 
best  of  my  belief,  been  previously  described,  except  in  a  preliminary  communication  published 
in  the  Journal  of  the   Netherland  Zoolcgical  Society. 

Among  these  undescribed  species  there  are  a  few  for  which  new  generic  definitions  have 
had  to  be  proposed.  These  new  genera  are  (1)  Lochiuccotroclius,  which  is  essentially  a  Conotrochus 
that  forms  small  colonies  by  budding ;  (2)  Citharocyathus,  which  appears  to  show  a  line  of 
connexion  between  Deltocyathus  and  Nototrochus ;  and  (3)  Placotrocliidcs,  which  seems  to 
connect  Placotrochus  and  Platytrochus. 

Several  of  these  deep-sea  species,  described  as  new,  have  however  a  very  close  resem- 
blance  to  species,  described  by  Seguenza,  from  the  Sicilian  and  Calabrian  Tertiary  rocks,  and  may 
perhaps  prove  to  be  identical  with  them. 

Several  species  that  range  across  the  Atlantic  and  into  East  Inclian  waters,  most  of  them 
also  occuring  in  a  fossil  state  in  the  Tertiary  Deposits  of  Southern  Europe,  are  found  amongst  the 
"Siboga"  material,  such  as  Deltocyathus  italicus  Michelotti,  Desmophyllum  cristagalli  E.  &  H., 
Flabcllum  laciniatum  Philippi  (a  variety),  Amphihelia  oculata  Linnens  and  Amphihelia  ramea  Muller. 


Among  other  curiosities  —  or,  as  I  prefer  to  regard  them,  weighty  and  suggestive 
facts  —  of  geographical  distribution,  must  be  mentioned  that  of  the  singular  Amphihelia-like 
Eupsammid  Dendrophyllia  (Coenopsammia)  profunda,  which  was  discovered  by  Pourtalès  in 
deep  water  among  the  West  Indian  Islands,  ancl  which  we  now  find  flourishing  in  the  depths 
of  the  Sea  of  Banda,  in  proximity  to  two  other  strange  Oculina-like  Eupsammids.  This  species 
has  also,   quite  recently,  been  discovered  by  the   "Investigator"   in  deep  water  off  Ceylon. 

The  cosmopolitan  Bathyactis  symmetrica  Pourtalès  is  of  course  present  in  the  collection, 
and  also  illustrates  its  well-known  elasticity  of  bathymetric  range,  having  been  dredged  at  the 
one  extreme  in    289   metres  (Station  12)  and  at  the  other  extreme  in   18S6  metres  (Station  208). 

The  almost  infinite  adaptability  to  pressure  conditions  of  Bathyactis  symmetrica  Pourtalès 
is  shared  by  its  congeners  Bathyactis  stephana,  which  ranges  from  69  to  1301  metres,  and 
Bathyactis  Siöogac,  which  ranges  from  522  to  19 14  metres.  Deltocyathus  lens,  a  small  new 
Turbinoloid  species,  can  accomodate  itself  with  almost  equal  ease,  having  been  dredged,  on 
the  one  hand,   at   390  metres  and,   on  the  other  hand,  at  4914  metres. 

Four  other  peculiarly  adaptable  species,  which  show  the  transition  between  the  deep-sea 
and  what  I  propose  to  call  the  deep  prope-littoral  zone,  may  here  be  mentioned.  The)-  are 
Deltocyathus  magnificus  Mosely  (522  to  15  metres),  Tropidocyathus  lessoni  Michelin  (390  to 
69  metres),  Trochocyathus  caryophylloides  (304  to  15  metres),  and  Flabellum  distinctuin  E.  & 
H.  There  are  no  hard  and  fast  boundary-lines  in  Nature,  and  I  do  not  think  that  the  extensive 
bathymetric  range  of  any  of  these  species  invalidates  the  distinction,  emphasized  in  this  Report, 
between  the  veteran   fauna  of  the  deep  sea. and  the  recruiting  ground  of  the  prope-littorBl  zone. 

The  southern  end  of  the  Sulu  Sea  seems  to  be  one  of  the  richest  places  in  the  world 
for  deep-sea  corals.  At  seven  stations  close  together,  between  the  parallels  of  50  43' and  6°  15'  N. 
and  the  meridians  of  ii9°4o'  and  12 1°  28'  E.  and  the  depths  of  270  and  1270  metres,  no 
less  than  32  species  representing  18  genera  were  dredged  by  the  „Siboga".  At  one  single 
station  of  these  seven  (Station  95,  522  metres)  22  species  of  14  genera  came  up  at  one  haul. 
Hardly  less  fertile  is  the  neighbourhood  of  the  Kei  Islands  in  the  Banda  Sea,  where  the 
"Siboga"  dredged  many  of  the  species  described  by  Moseley  from  the  "Challenger"  collection. 
When  it  is  remembered  that  some  of  these  teeming  coral-grounds  support  prolific  branching 
forms  like  Amphihelia,  we  may  well  imagine  that  in  the  depths  of  some  of  the  tropical  seas 
actual  submarine  coral-reefs  may  be  forming.  This  idea  is  supported  by  the  facts  mentioned  in 
the  Report  on  the  "Investigator"  deep-sea  Madreporaria,  that  at  a  depth  of  430  fathoms  off 
the  Malabar  coast  nearly  half  a  ton  of  deep-sea  corals  were  brought  up  at  a  single  haul  of 
the  dredge ;  and  that  at  a  depth  of  1000  fathoms,  in  the  Laccadive  Sea,  over  two  hundred 
specimens  of  a  large  species  of  Caryophyllia  were  netted  in  a  haul  of  no  long  duration. 

Xo  tremendous  hauls  of  this  sort  appear  to  have  been  made  in  the  course  of  the 
"Siboga"  expedition,  but,  on  the  other  hand,  the  basins  explored  by  the  "Siboga"  are  vastly 
richer  in  species  than  the  depths  of  the  seas  of  the  western  part  of  the  Oriental  Region 
explored  by  the   "Investigator". 


II.    LIST  OF  AUTHORS  CONSULTED. 


AUTHORS  EARLIER  THAN  MILNE  EDWARDS  AND  HAIME  ARE  NOT  INCLUDED. 

AGASSIZ,  A.  Three  Cruises  of  the  Blake,  Vol.  II.  p.  148  et  seq.  Bulletin  of  the  Museum  of  Comparative  Zoology. 

Harvard,  Vol.   XV.    1888. 
ALCOCK,    A.    On    Sorae    Newly-recorded    Corals    from    the    Indian    Seas.  Journal  of  the   Asiatic  Society  of 

Bengal,   LXII.  pt.   2.    1893. 

On  Some  New  and  Rare  Corals  from  the  Deep  Waters  of  India.  Act.  at.   LXIII.   pt.   2.    1894. 

— ■ —  An    Account    of   the    Deep-Sea    Madreporaria    collected    by    the    Royal    Indian    Marine    Survey   Ship 

Investigator.  Calcutta,    1S98. 

BaSSÉT-Smith,  P.  W.  Report  on  the  Corals  from  the  Tizzard  and  Macclesfield  Banks,  Annals  and  Ma- 
gazine of  Natural  History  (6)  VI.    1890. 

DANA,  J.   D.   United  States  Exploring  Expedition.  Zoophytes.   Philadelphia,    1848. 

D'ARCHIAC   et   HAIME.   Animaux  Fossiles  du   Groupe  Nummulitique  de  1'Inde.  Paris,    1853. 

DENNANT,  J.  New  Species  of  Corals  from  the  Australian  Tertiaries.  Transactions  and  Proceedings  of  the 
Royal  Society  of  South   Australia.   XXIII.    1898 — 99  and   XXV.    1901. 

DUNCAN,  P.  Martin.  Fossil  Corals  and  Echinoderms  from  the  South  Australian  Tertiaries.  Annals  and 
Magazine  of  Natural  History  (3)   XIV.    1864. 

Report  on  the   "Porcupine"   Madreporaria.   Proceedings  of  the  Royal  Society.    1870. 

-  Madreporaria    dredged   up  during  the  Expedition   of  H.   M.   S.   Porcupine.  Transactions  of  the  Zoolo- 

gical  Society.   VIII.    1873 — 74  and   X.    1878 — 79. 

Deep  Sea  and  Littoral  Corals.   Proceedings  of  the  Zoological  Society,    1876. 

Monograph  of  the   Fossil   Corals  of  Sind.  Pala;ontologia  Indica,  ser.  VII  and  XIV.  Vol.  I.  Part  2,  18S0. 

Recent  Corals  from   Madeira.  Proceedings  of  the  Zoological  Society,    1882. 

-  Remarks    on    Actinology    of  the  Atlantic   Ocean.  Annals  and   Magazine  of  Natural  History,  series   5. 

Vol.   XII.    1883. 

-  A    Revision    of  the    Families   and    Genera    of  the    Sclerodermic   Zoantharia  or  Madreporaria.  Journal 

of  the   Linnean  Society,  Zoology,   XVIII.    1884 — 85. 

On  the  Madreporaria  of  the  Mergui  Archipelago.  Journal   of  the  Linnean  Society,   XXI.    1886 — 89. 

DüCHASSAING,  P.  et  MlCHELOTTI,   J.   Memoire  sur  les  Coralliaires  des  Antilles.  Mem.  Accad.   Sci.  Torino, 

Classe  di  Fis.  et  Mat.  ser.    2-1.   XIX.    1S60. 
GARDINER,    J.   Stanley.    On  Turbinolid   and   Oculinoid   Corals  from  the  South   Pacific.   Proceedings  of  the 

Zoological  Society,    1898. 

-  On  the  Solitary  Corals  collected  by  Dr.   A.   Willey.   Willey's  Zoological  Results.  Cambridge,    1899. 

-  On  the  Anatomy  of  a  supposed  new  Species  of  Coenopsammia  from  Lifu.  Willey's  Zoological  Results 

Part  IV,   Cambridge,    1899. 
Heider,  A.  R.  VON,  Korallenstudien.  Zeitschrift  für  wissenschaftliche  Zoölogie,  Bd.  LI.   1891. 
DAN,   E.   Zoanthaircs  provenant  des  campagnes  du   vacht  1'Hirondelle.   Monaco,    1895. 


Kent,  VV.  Saville.  On  some  new   and  little-known  Species  of  Madrepores.   Proceedings  of  the  Zoological 

Society,    [871. 
Madreporaria    from    the    Coast    of  Spain    and    Portugal.  Annals  and    Magazine  of  Natura!    History  (4) 

VI.   1870. 
Lacaze-Duthiers,  II.    Evolution   du   Polypier  du  Flabellum  anthophyllum.  Archives  de  Zoölogie   Expéri- 

mentale.  (3)  II.    [894. 

Faune  du   Golfe  du  Lion,  Corailliaires.  Archiv.  de  Zool.  Expérim.  (3)  V.    [897. 

LlNDSTROM,    G.   Contributions    to    the    Actinology   of  the    Atlantic    Ocean.  Kongliga  Svenska  Vetenskaps- 

Akad.  Handlingar.   Bd.  XIV.  X"  6,   1877. 
A    Reply    to    Remarks    of    Prof.    Duncan,    Annals    and    Magazine    of    Natural    History,    ser.    5,   Vol. 

XIII.    1884. 

Qn  Thecocyathus,   etc.   Ofversigt   Kongl.   Vetenskaps-Akad.   Förhandlingar    1900  (1901). 

MARENZELLER,     E.    VON.     Ueber    einige    japanische    Turbinoliiden.    Annalen    des    K.K.    Naturhistorischen 

Hofmuseums,   Pd.   III.    [888. 
Ueber    das   Wachsthum    der    Gattung    Flabellum.    Zoologische  Jahrbücher,  Systematik   u.  s.   w.   Abth. 

Pd.   III.    1888. 
MlLNE   Kdwards   H.  et   Haime,  J.   Monographie  des  Turbinolides,   Annales  des  Sciences  Naturelles  (3  sér.) 

Zoölogie,   IX,    1848.   Monographie  des  Eupsammides,  act.  cit.  X.   1848.  Monographie  des  Oculinides, 

act.  cit.  XIII.   1850. 

Histoire   Xaturelle  des  Coralliaires,   toni.   II.    1857,  torn.   III.    1S60. 

MOSELEY,   H.   X.  A   New  Species  of  Simple  Coral.   Proceedings  of  the  Zoological  Society.    1880. 

Report  on  the  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria  dredged  by   H.   M.   S.   Challenger.    1881. 

ORTMANN,   A.  Studiën   über  Steinkorallen.   Zoologische  Jahrbücher,  Systematik  u.  s.  w.  Abth.  Pd.  III.   18S8. 
OSASCO,    E.    Corallari    Pliocenici    del   Piemonte  etc.  Atti  della  R.   Accademia  di  Torino,  XXXI.    1895 — 96. 

Corallari    Miocenici    del  Piemonte,  act.  cit.   XXXII.    1896 — 97.  Corallari  Oligocenici  del  Piemonte, 

act.  cit.  XXXIII.    1897 — 98. 
Pi  iURTALÈS,    L.    F.    DE.    Contributions    to    the    Fauna  of  the  Gulf  Stream  at  great  depths.  Pulletin  of  the 

Museum   of  Comparative  Zoology.   Harvard  I.    1863 — 69. 
Illustrated    Catalogue    of   the    Museum    of  Comparative  Zoology,   Harvard.   X"  IV.  Deep  Sea  Corals, 

1871.  —  X"  VIII.   Deep-Sea  Corals,   1874. 
Reports    on    the    Dredging   Operations  of  the  U.  S.  Coast  Survey  Steamer  Blake:   Corals.  Buil.   Mus. 

Comp.   Zool.   Harvard  V.    1878 — 79,  and  VI.    1879 — 80. 
REHBERG,  H.  Neue  und  wenig  bekannte  Korallen.  Abhandlungen  aus  dem  Gebiete  der  Xaturwissenschaften 

etc.  Hamburg,  Pd.   XII.    1892. 
Saks,  G.  O.   On  Some  Remarkable  Forms  of  Animal  Life  from  the  Great  Deeps  off  the  Nonvegian  Coast. 

Christiania,    1872. 
ScLATER,   V'.   L.  On  a  New  Madreporarian  Coral.  Proceedings  of  the  Zoological  Society,    1886. 
SEGIEXZA,    G.    Corallarii    Fossili    della    Rocca    Terziarie    del    Distretto    di    Messina.    Memorie    della    Reale 

Accademia  delle  Scienze  di  Torino  (Fis.  e   Mat.)  ser.   2.   XXI.    1864. 
SEMPER,  C.    Ueber   Generationswechsel  bei    Steinkorallen  u.  s.  w.   Zeitschrift  für  wissenschaftliche  Zoölogie. 

Bd.  XXII.    1S72. 
STUDER,  Th.  Steinkorallen  auf  der  Reise  S.  M.  S.  Gazelle  gesammelt.  Monatsberichte  der  Köngl.  Preussischen 

Akademie  zu  Rerlin,   (1877)    187S. 
TeximjxAVoods,  J.   E.    On  the   Extra-tropical  Corals  of  Australia.   Proceedings  of  the  Linnean  Society  of 

Xew  South  Wales,   II.    1S78. 
THOMSON,   C.   WyvillE.  The  Depths  of  the  Sea.  London,    1873. 
VAUGHAN,    T.    WAYLAND.    A    Xew    Genus    and    Species    of   Turbinolid   Coral  from  Japan.    Proceedings  of 

the   United  States  National   Museum,   Vol.   XXII.    1900. 
List    of    Papers  on   Recent  and  Fossil  Stony  Corals.   Sammlungen   des  Geologischen   Reichs-Museums 

in   Leiden,  ser.  2,   Bd.  II.   Heft    1,    1901. 


6 

VERRILL,    A.    E.    Synopsis    of   North    Pacific    Polyps   and    Corals.    Proceedings    of  the  Essex  Institute,   V. 

1866 — 67,   (Communications  p.    17). 
Review    of    the    Corals    and    Polyps    of    the    West    Coast    of    North    America.    Transactions    of  the 

Connecticut   Academy  I.   pt.  2.    1867 — 71. 
New   and   Imperfectly-known   Echinoderms  and  Corals.   Proceeding  of  the  Boston  Society  of  Natural 

History,  XII.    1868— 1869. 

Descriptions  of  New  Corals.   American  Journal  of  Science,   2nd  ser.   XLIX.    1870. 

Marine  Fauna  of  the  Eastern  Coast  of  North  America.  American  Journal  of  Science,  31'd  ser.  XVI.  1878. 

-   Marine    Fauna    off  the    South-eastern    Coast  of   New  England.   American  Journal  of  Science,   y&  ser. 

XXIX.    1885. 


III.    SYSTEMATIC  ACCOUNT  OF  THE  SIBOGA 
DEEP-SEA    MADREPORARIA. 

MADREPORARIA  APOROSA  Edw.  &  H. 

I.    Family  Ti'rbinolid.-e  Edw.   &   H. 

Twenty  genera,  including  subgenera,  of  this  family  are  represented  in  the  collection. 

I.  Caryophyllia  Lamk.,  Stokes,   Duncan. 

The  collection  contains  specimens  of  seven  species  of  this  genus,  one  of  which  however 
is  represented  only  by  dead  and  worn  specimens  that  are  hardly  identifiable.  There  are  besides, 
from   Station    159,   some   dead   fragments  of  what   may  be   a   Caryophyllia. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  Deep  Sea  species  of  Caryophyllia. 

I.    Coralium  free,  cornute,  septa  in  six  systems  and  four  complete  cycles : 

1.  Costa;  thin  and  sinuous,  those  of  the  first  two  cycles  peculiarly  salient 

and  trenchant ï.  C.  cultrifera. 

2.  Costae  mere  granular  striations,  except  in  young  specimens,  in  which 

those  of  the  first  two  cycles  are  broad  and  angular 2.  C.  scobinosa. 

II.    Coralium  fixed  : 

1.  Septa  in  six  systems  and  four  complete  cycles: 

I.  Septa  of  the  fourth  cycle  larger  and  very  much  more  exsert 

than  those  of  the  third 3.  C.  panda. 

II.   Septa   of   third  and  fourth  cycles  almost  equal 4.   C.  ephyala. 

2.  A  fifth  cycle  present  in  some  of  the  systems,  thecal  wall  with  trans- 

verse  undulating  accretion  ridges 5.  C.  transversalis. 

3.  Septa    having    the    appearance    of  five   systems    of   four    regular    and 

complete  cycles 6.  C.  quadragenaria. 

1.    Caryophyllia   cultrifera   n.   sp.    Plate   I.   Fig.    1,    ia. 

Stat.   101.  6°i5'N.,   i20°2i'E.    1270  m.   1   Ex. 
In   form   this  species   much   resembles    C.  communis  Seg.  and   C  ambrosia  mihi,  but  differs 


from  both  in  the  enormous  size  of  the  septa  and  remarkable  prominence  and  sharpness  of  the 
rosta-  of  the  first  two  cycles.  The  septa  of  these  two  cycles  are  even  larger  than  those  of 
C.  (Ceratocyathus)  zanchca  and  compressa   Seg. 

Corallum   unattached,   curved   and   slightly  twisted,   hardly  compressed. 

Costa;  ver)-  thin,  sinuous,  those  of  the  first  two  cycles  extremely  prominent  and  trenchant. 

Septa    thin,    wavy,    denticulate,    48    in   number  in   six   regular  systems :   those  of  the   first 

two    cycles    are    equal,   and   are  of  enormous  size  and  greatly  exsert :   those   of  the   fourth   cycle 

are    a  little  larger  and  very  much   more  exsert  than   those   of  the   third  :   the  surfaces  of  all   are 

rather  distantly  papillose. 

Pali  large,  strongly  sinuous,  strongly  but  bluntly  denticulate,  1 2  in  number  and  placed 
opposite  the  septa  of  the  third  cycle. 

The  columella  consists  of  three  or  four  broad   curly  ribbons. 
Soft  parts  brownish-yellow :  corallum  snow-white  with  a  thin  brownish  epitheca. 

Greatest   height  of  corallum   28   millim. 
Major  diameter  of  calicle        22        „ 
Minor  „  20 

2.    Qaryophyllia  scobinosa  n.   sp.   Plate  I.   Fig.    2,    2a. 

Stat.     45.  70  24'     S.,    ii8°i5'.2E.  794  m.  3   Ex. 

Stat.    102.  6°    4'.i  N.,    I20°44'     E.   535   m.    3   Ex.   (small). 

This  species  also  is  related  to  C.  communis  Seg.  and  even  more  nearly  to  C.pumila  Seg 

Corallum  unattached  (except  when  young)  curved,  hardly  compressed. 

The  costae  in  the  larger  specimens  are  merely  discontinuous  striations  amid  a  field  of 
close-set  but  discrete  miliary  granules,  but  in  the  smaller  specimens  angular  costae  corresponding 
with  the  first  two  cycles  of  septa  are  very  distinct,  at  least  on  the  convex  curve  of  the  corallum. 

Septa  thin,  48  in  number  in  six  regular  systems :  those  of  the  first  two  cycles,  which 
are  equal,  are  conspicuously  large  and  exsert :  those  of  the  4th  cycle  are  about  the  same  size 
as,  but  are  a  little  more  exsert  than,  those  of  the  3rd:  the  surfaces  of  all  are  denticulate,  and 
the  edges,  within  the  calicular  fossa,   a  little  sinuous. 

Pali  strongly  sinuous,  bluntly  denticulate,  1 2  in  number  and  placed  opposite  the  septa 
of  the  third   cycle. 

Columella   of  a   few  broad  twisted   ribbons,   small. 

Soft  parts  brownish-yellow :  corallum  white,  but  much  discoloured  on  the  outside  below 
the   calicular  margin. 

Greatest  height   of  corallum   20       millim. 
Major  diameter  of  calicle        16.5       „ 
Minor  „  „        „  13.5       „ 


3.  Caryophyllia  panda  n.  sp.    Plate  I.   Fig.   3,   3a. 

Stat.   177.  2°24'.5S.,   [29°38'.sE.   1633  m.    1    Ex. 

This  species  is  closely  related  to  C.  arcuata  Edw.  &  H.  and  to  Caryophyllia  (not 
Ceratocyathus)  zanclcea  Seg.,  also  to  C  ephyala  mihi,  from  all  of  which  it  differs  in  having  the 
septa  of  the  fourth  cycle  larger  and  very  much  more  exsert  than  those  of  the  third. 

Corallum  curved,  moderately  compressed,  expanding  from  a  stout  pedicle  which  is  attached 
by  a   broad  encrusting  base,  the  thecal  wall  is  finely  granular,   the  costa;  showing  as  finestriffi. 

Septa  stout,  4S  in  number  in  six  regular  systems,  those  of  the  first  two  cycles  are 
equal  and  are  conspicuously  large  and  exsert,  those  of  the  fourth  cycle  are  larger  and  much 
more  exsert  than  those  of  the  third  :  the  surfaces  of  all  are  clenticulate. 

Pali  large,  flexuous,  1 2  in  number  placed  opposite  the  septa  of  the  third  cycle ;  their 
surface  is  strongly  but  bluntly  denticulate. 

The  columella  consists   of  two   or  three  curling   ribbons. 

The  corallum   is  glistening  white. 

Greatest  height  of  corallum  about   35   millim. 
Major  diameter  of  calicle  19        „ 

Minor  „  15         „ 

4.  Caryophyllia  ephyala  Alcock. 

Caryophyllia    ephyala    Alcock.    Annals    and    Magazine    of   Natural    History,    Jan.    1891,    p.   6. 
Investigator  Deep-Sea  Madreporaria,  p.    13,   pi.   I.  figs.  4,  4a. 

Stat.  59.  io°22'.7S.,  1230  16'. 5  E.  390  m.  1  dead  Ex. 
Stat.  95.  5°43'-5  N.,  ii9°4o'  E.  522  m.  1  dead  Ex. 
Stat.  251.     5°28'.4S-,   1320   o'. 2  E.  204  m.  2  Ex. 

The  two  specimens  from  Station  251  and  that  from  Station  95,  though  they  do  not 
agree  in  every  detail  with  the  specimens  from  the  Andaman  and  Laccadive  Seas,  are  not  to 
be  separated  from  them.  The  differences  appear  to  be  due  partly  to  age,  and  partly  to  slight 
malformation   in   one  specimen. 

Distribution :  Laccadive  Sea,    Andaman  Sea,   Banda  Sea. 

5.  Caryophyllia  sp.  (an  claims?). 

Stat.  95.  5°43'.5  N.,  H9°4o'  E.  522  m.  7  Ex.,  dead  and  worn. 
Stat.  100.  6°  11'  N.,  I20°37'.sE.  450  m.  3  Ex.,  dead  and  worn. 
Stat.  259.  5°29'.2S.,    I32°52'.5E.  487  m.    1   Ex.,  dead. 

These  specimens  are  all  dead  and  worn  and  are  not  identifiable  with  certainty,  but  they 
are  extremely  like   C.   clavus. 


6.    Caryophyllia  clavus  var.   transversa  lis  Moseley. 

Caryophyllia   clavus  var.    transversalis  Moseley.    Challenger   Deep-Sea   Madreporaria,  p.   134. 
pi.   I.   figs.   2,   2a. 

3IBOGA-EXPEDITIE  XVIff.  2 


io 

Stat.     12.  7°  15'     S.,    ii5°is'.6E.  289  m.    1   Ex. 
Stat.  256.  5°26'.6S.,    i32°32'.5E.   397  m.   3  Ex. 

The  Challenger  specimens  were  dredged  off  the  Kei  Islands,  on  almost  the  exact  spot 
of  Siboga  Station    256. 

7.    Caryophylla  quadragenaria   n.   sp.   Plate   I.   Fig.   4,   4». 

Stat.     90.    I°I7'.5N.,  1180  53'     E.   2S1    to   54  m.    1    Ex. 
Stat.  251.  5°28'.4S.,   i32°o.2'    E.  204  m.    1   Ex. 
Stat.  2S9.  90   o'-3  S.,   I26324'.5E.    112  m.    1   Ex. 

Allied  to   C.  cylindracea   Reuss,    C.  abyssorum   Duncan  and   C.  antillarum   Pourtalès. 

Corallum  rather  elongate,  little  compressed,  gradually  and  elegantly  expanding  from  a 
curved,   very  short,   rather  slender  cylindrical   peduncle  with  an   incrusting  base 

The  costae,  whose  granular  snrface  is  glazed  over  by  a  thin  vitreous  epitheca,  are  equal; 
they  are  very  distinct  at  the  calicular  orifice,  and  thence  gradually  become  less  salient  until  they 
are  lost  on  the  pedicle. 

Septa  exsert,  40  in  number,  arranged  with  perfect  regularity  in  what  appears  to  be 
five  systems  of  four  complete  cycles ;  their  surfaces  are  finely  denticulate,  and  their  edges  inside 
the  calicular  fossa  are  wavy.  Those  of  the  iïrst  two  cycles,  which  are  equal,  are  much  the 
largest  and  most  exsert,  dividing  the  calicle  into  ten  perfectly  equal  compartments ;  those  ot 
the  fourth  cycle  are  a  little  larger  and  a  good  deal  more  exsert  than  those  of  the  third. 

Pali  10  in  number,  opposite  the  septa  of  the  third  cycle:  they  have  the  form  of  large 
upstanding  curls,  just  like  the  ringlets  that  compose  the  columella  of  most   Caryophylliee. 

Columella  large,  rather  deep-seated,  made  up  of  numerous  cincinni. 

The  thecal  wall  is  stained  with  purple-brown  near  the  calicular  margin,  bevond  which 
it  has  a  striated  appearance  owing  to  the  costce  being  alternately  darker  and  lighter. 

Greatest  height   of  corallum    15    millim. 
Major  diameter   of  calicle         10        „ 
Minor  „  „        „  8 

Another  specimen  of  this  species  was  dredged  in    112   metres  water  at  station    289. 

II.  Ceratotrochus   Edw.   &  H.,   Duncan. 

The  collection  contains  three  species  which  may  be  referred  to  this  genus.  One  of  them, 
from  Station  102,  is  represented  by  broken  specimens  to  which  I  am  reluctant  to  give  a  name 
that  may  be  a  stumbling-block  to  future  systematists ;  while  another,  from  Station  159,  is  a 
mere  relic  which  has  even  less  right  to  a  specific  name,  for  it  might  equally  well  be  regardecl 
as  a  worn   and  weathered    Trochocyathtis. 

S.    Ceratotrochus  vemishis  n.   sp.    Plate   I.    Fig.    5,    $a. 

Stat.  256.  5°26'.6S.,    i32°32'.5E.   397  m.    1    Ex. 
The   corallum   is  unattached,   acutely  conical,   straight,   a  little   compressed,   thick-walled. 


I  I 


Costae  equal,  in  the  form  of  very  thin  microscopically-serrate  carinse,  which  extend  from 
the  calicular  margin  to  the  acuminate  base. 

Calicular  orifice  horizontal,  the  fossa  deep.  Septa  in  six  systems  and  five  cycles,  the 
fifth  cycle  being  undeveloped  in  two  of  the  half-systems.  Those  of  the  first  cycle  are  pre- 
eminently  large  and  exsert,  besides  being  thicker  than  the  others;  those  of  the  other  four 
cycles  diminish  successively  in  size  and  exsertion  from  the  2,ul  to  the  5th.  All  the  septa  are 
straight  and  finely  and  sparsely  granular,  and  all  hut  those  of  the  first  cycle  have  the  edge, 
within   the   calicular  fossa,   slightly  sinuous. 

Columella  deep-seated,  consisting  of  a  fair  number  of  twisted  pinnacles  arising  from  a 
basal  network.  Only  the  septa  of  the  first  two  cycles  meet  the  columella,  and  then  only  at  a 
great  depth  in   the  calicular  fossa. 

Heisfht  of  corallum  10   millim. 

Major  diameter  of  calicle      9        „ 
Minor  „  „         „  8 

III.  Subgenus  Conotrochus  Seguenza. 

Only  cliffers  from  Ceratotrochus  in  having  the  theca  immersed  in  an  epitheca  showing 
transverse  growth-rings :  the  epitheca  forms  for  the  calicular  orifice  a  well-marked  boundary 
line  in  which  the  outer  ends   of  the  summits  of  the  septa  are  somewhat  sunk. 

9.    CcratotrocJius  (Conotrochus)  funicolumna   n.   sp.   Plate  I.   Fig.   6,   6a. 

Stat.     95.   5°43'.5  N.,    H9°4o'     E.   522   m.    1    Ex.,  dead. 
Stat.    100.   6°  11'     X.     I20°37'.5E.  450  m.   2   Ex.,  dead. 

The  dead  corallum,  which  is  all  that  we  possess  of  this  singularly  elegant  species,  Iooks 
much  like  a  shortened  form  a  of  Conotrochus  typus  Seg.  from  the  Sicilian  Tertiaries,  to  which 
it  is  evidently  nearly  related,  as  also  to  P leurocyathus  brunneus  Moseley. 

Corallum  attached,  conical,  short,  the  calicular  orifice  perfectly  circular.  The  costse, 
which  correspond  in  number  to  the  septa,  are  all  of  one  size  and  form,  but  are  somewhat 
hidden  by  a  thin  epitheca  in  which  broad  rings  of  accretion  are  noticeable. 

The  rounded  summits  of  the  septa  are  just  visible  above  the  sharply  defined  calicular 
margin.  The  septa  are  in  six  systems  and  four  complete  cycles,  the  primaries  being  the  largest 
and  the  others  gradually  diminishing  in  size  in  serial  succession  ;  they  all  descend  very  deeply 
into  the  cup. 

The  columella  is  a  stout  isolated  column  of  remarkable  height,  composed  of  over  a 
dozen  long  ribbon-like  strands,  which  are  all  tightly  twisted  together  in  one  solid  spiral  like  a 
piece  of  rope. 

Height  of  corallum    12.5   millim. 
Diameter  of  calicle    11.5         „ 


I  2 


The  rope-like  columella  of  this  species  is  very  characteristic,  and  is  well  exhibited  in 
all  three  specimens.  No  stereoplasma  is  present  in  any  of  them,  a  fact  which  is  sufficiënt  to 
separate  the  species  from  the  closely  allied  Platrocyat/uis  èrunneus  of  Moseley. 


IV.  Subgenus  Phloeocyathus   nom.   nov. 

Pleurocyathus    Moseley    [nee    Keferstein),    Challenger    Deep    Sea    Madreporaria    p.     159 

(nom.   praeocc). 

The  tips  of  the  septa  are  embedded  in  stereoplasma :   otherwise  as   Conotrochus. 

10.    Ceratotrochus  (Phlceocyathus)  hospes,   n.   sp.   Plate  II.   fig.    8,   Sa. 
Stat.    150.  o°6'N.,    I29°7'.2E.    1089  m.    1   Ex.    (broken). 

Corallum  conical,  covered  with  a  thin,  dark-brown,  speckled  epitheca,  beneath  which 
numerous  fine  wrinkles  and  fine  discrete  granulation,  as  well  as  several  bold  growth-rings,  are 
visible.    No   distinct  costse  exist. 

The  calicular  margin  is  circular  and  the  epitheca  is  folded  over  it,  so  that  the  septa 
are  sunk  below   it. 

The  calicular  fossa  is  deep  and,  like  the  septa,  is  of  a  dark  brown  colour,  the  edges 
of  the  septa  and  the  tips  of  the  strands  of  the  columella  being  nearly  black.  The  septa  do 
not  project  far  into  the  fossa,  and  appear  even  less  salient  than  they  are  owing  to  the  presence 
of  abundant  stereoplasma.  They  are  in  six  systems  and  four  cycles,  the  last  cycle  being  absent 
in   a  few   of  the   half-systems.   Those  of  the   first  cycle  are  slightly   the   largest. 

Most  of  the  septa  touch  the  columella,  which  though  very  deep-seated  is  fairly  promi- 
nent,  and  consists  of  about  a  dozen   low   cincinni. 

The  corallum  of  the  unique  specimen  is  broken,  so  that  its  height  cannot  be  determined, 
hut   the   maximum   diameter  of  its  nearly  circular  calicular  orifice   is  close  upon   9   millim. 

A  worm  appears  to  have  inhabited  the  corallum  as  a  commensal,  tunnelling  in  the 
stereoplasm. 

From  P.  èrunneus  Moseley  this  species  differs  (1)  in  the  absence  of  costse,  (2)  in 
haring  the  septa   sunk  below   the   margin   of  the   calicle,   and  (3)   in   the   larger  columella. 


V.  Lochmaeotrochus,  n.  gen. 

This  genus  agrees  in  all  respects  with  Phlceocyathus  (—-  Pleurocyathus  Moseley  nee 
Keferstein",  which  Martin  Duncan  regards  as  identical  with  Ceratotrochus  E.  &  H.)  but  differs 
in   forming  a  bush-like  colony  bybudding  —  sometimes  dichotomously  —  near  the  calicular  margin. 

Corallum  cylindro-conical,  covered  with  a  thickish  epitheca  which  rises  higher  than  the 
septa,  budding  near  the  calicular  margin  to  form  a  small  bushy  colony. 


Septa    narrow,    not    much  encroaching  on   the  calicular  fossa,  slightly  sunken  below  the 
calicular  margin  where  they  are  immersed  in  a  zone  of  stereoplasma. 
Calicular  fossa  deep ;  septal  loculi   open  to  the  base. 
Columella  >A~  good  size,  loosely  reticular  or  spongy,  deep-seated. 
No  pali   or  paliform  lobes  of  any  sort. 

ii.   Lochmaotrochus  oculeus  n.  sp.   Plate   II.   fig.   9,   ga. 

Stat.  259.  5°29'.2S.,    i32°52'.5E.  487  m.  3  Ex. 

Stat.   159.  o°  59'.  iS.,   i29°48'.8  E.  411   m.  Some  dead  and  broken  fragments. 

The  colony  has  the  shape  of  a  small  irregular  bush,  formed  by  budding  (often  dicho- 
tomously)  in  several  planes  and  up  to  the  fourth  generation.  The  budding  takes  place  near 
the  calicular  margin,   is   fairly   regular,   and   is  a   true  gemmation. 

An  individual  corallum  when  nearly  fullgrown  is  cylindro-conical,  sometimes  straight, 
but  usually  a  little  curved.  It  is  invested  by  a  granular  epitheca,  which  rises  higher  than  the 
septa  and  forms  a  sharp  rim  or  lip  round  the  circular  calicular  orifice.  The  epitheca  may 
entirely  conceal  the  costae,  or  may,  at  any  rate  in  the  lower  half  of  the  wall,  leave  faint 
traces  of  them. 

The  calicular  fossa  is  deep,  and  its  mouth  is  perfectly  circular  and  level. 

The  septa,  which  are  all  of  a  height,  are  sunken  and  are  separated  from  the  over- 
hanging epithecal  lip  by  a  well  defined  ring-groove.  They  do  not  project  much  into  the  calicle, 
and  appear  less  salient  than  they  really  are  because  superiorly  they  are  imbedded  in  a  zone 
of  stereoplasm.  They  are  usually  36  in  number,  every  alternate  one  reaching  the  columella. 
They  are  arranged  in  six  systems  and  four  cycles,  the  fourth  cycle  however  being  developed 
in  only  one  half  of  each  of  the  six  systems,  and  the  tertiary  septa  being  enlarged  in  the  six 
half-systems  in  which  the  fourth  cycle  exists.  Thus  the  arrangement  of  the  septa  may  be  called 
regularly  irregular.  Ultimately,  however,  the  septa  reach  the  full  number  of  48,  in  six  regular 
systems   of  four  complete  cycles. 

The  columella  though  deep-seated  is  large  and  prominent  :  it  is  fairly  circular  and 
consists   of  a  loose  spongy  reticulum. 

An  average  nearly  full-grown  corallum,  with  36  septa,  is  12  millim.  long,  the  diameter 
of  its  mouth  inside  the  prominent  epithecal  lip  being  7  millim.  Specimens  with  the  full  number 
of  4S   septa  are  a  little  larger. 

Though  this  species  lies  within  Martin  Duncan's  division  of  Turbinolidce  Gemmantes, 
it  is,  as  I  have  stated  in  the  introduction,  merely  a  compound  Ceratotrochus  (Conotrochus), 
and  at  nrst  I  was  inclined  to  regard  it  as  identical  with  Ceratotrochus  ( P hlceocyathus)  hospes, 
which  species  again  is  but  little  different  from   Ceratotrochus  (Conotrochus)  funicolumna. 

From  Ccenocyathus  Edw.  &  H.  Lochmceotrochus  is  readily  distinguished  by  the  absence 
of  pali,  and  from    Gemmulatrochus  Duncan  by  the  well-developed  columella. 


14 

VI.  Cyathoceras  Moseley. 

Cyathoceras  Moseley.   Challenger  Deep-Sea  Madreporaria,  p.    156. 

12.    Cyathoceras    Tydemani  n.   sp.   Plate  I.   Fig.    7,   ~a. 

Stat.     95.   S°43'-5  N.,    ii9°4o'E.   522  m.  2  Ex. 
Stat.    105.  6°    8'     N.,    1210  19' E.   275   m.   5    Ex. 

Corallum  elongate-goblet-shaped,  attached  by  a  short,  curved,  cylindrical  pedicle.  Thecal 
wall  thin,  granular.  The  costae  are  granular  ridges  only  reaching  halfway  down  the  thecal  wall ; 
those  of  the   first  two  cycles   are  the   most   distinct,   and   even  they  are   not  very  prominent. 

Calicular  orifice   nearly  horizontal ;   calicular  fossa   very   deep. 

The  septa,  which  are  only  very  slightly  exsert,  have  a  distantly-granular  surface  and 
a  sinuous  edo-e.  They  are  60  in  number  and  their  arrangement  is  decidedly  irregular,  appearing 
to  be  in  six  systems  of  fonr  cycles  with  two  extra  half-systems  intercalated.  Those  of  the  first 
two  cycles  are  much  the  largest  and  the  most  exsert,  while  those  of  the  other  cycles  diminish 
in   size   in   serial   succession. 

Columella  ver)-  deep-seated  and  very  sharply  delimited  from  the  septa,  consisting  of  two 
or   more   curling  ribbons. 

The  appearance  of  this  coral  is  exactly  that  of  a  Caryophyllia  devoid  of  pali,  or  of  a 
Desmophyllum  with  a  Caryophylliaceous  columella. 

Heio-ht   of  corallum  17.^    millim. 


& 


Major  diameter  of  calicle     8  „ 

Minor  „  „         „  7 

Cyathoceras    Tydemani    is    closely    related    to    C.   cornu   Moseley,   which  was  dredged  by 
the  Challeneer  off  the  mouth  of  the  Rio  de  la  Plata,  and  off  the  South-East  corner  of  Australia. 

VII.  Trochocyathus  Edw.  &  H.,  Duncan. 
There    are    two    species    of   this    genus    in    the  collection. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga   Deep  Sea  species  of  Trochocyathus. 

I.    Septa  in  more  than  four  cycles:   pali  lamellar  : 

1.  Septa    and    pali  extremely  regular:   columella   a  reticulum  of  coarsc 

granules i.  T.  caryophylloides. 

2.  Columella    sublaminar:    the    septa    of  the   fourth  cycle  usually   unite 

with  those  of  the  third 2.    T.  pileus 

13.    TrocliocyatJms  caryopJiylloidcs  n.  sp.   Plate  II.   Fig.    10,    10a. 

Stat.  251.  5°28'.4.S.,  1323  o'.2  E.  204  m.  1  Ex. 
Stat.  253.  5°48'.2S.,  I32°i3'  E.  304  m.  1  Ex. 
[Stat.     96.  S.  E.  of  Pearl  Bank,  Sulu  Archipelago.    15   m.  4   Ex.| 


Corallum  fixed  by  a  very  short  and  rather  slender  peduncle  with  a  non-encrusting  base, 
a  little  curved  and  compressed,  the  major  axis  ol  the  calicle  on  a  slightly  lower  |)lane  than 
the  minor.  Thecal  wall  finely  yranular ;  the  costa-  are  little  more  than  oranular  slri.r  becominer 
distinct  ridges  only  near  the  calicular  margin. 

Septa  stout,  exsert,  their  surface  beset  with  radiating  rows  of  small  granules;  they  are 
64  in  number  and  have  an  apparent  arrangement  in  eight  systems  of  four  cycles.  Those  of 
the  iïrst  two  cycles  are  equally  large  and  exsert ;  those  of  the  third  cycle  are  a  little  smaller 
and   less  exsert   than   their  predecessors  and   a  little  larger  and  more  exsert  than  their  successors. 

Pali  stout  but  lamelliform,  32  in  number  and  placed  opposite  all  the  septa  except  those 
of  the  last  cycle ;  they  are  of  two  sizes  -  -  large  ones  opposite  the  1 6  septa  of  the  apparent 
third  cycle,  and  small  ones  opposite  the  16  septa  of  the  apparent  fïrst  two  cycles  -  -  but  they 
all  stand  in  one  ring  of  wonderful  regularity,  sharply  defined  both  from  the  septa  and  from 
the   columella. 

CoLumella  deep-seated,  formeel  of  a  somewhat  spongiform  cushion  of  coarse  granules. 

Corallum   whitish,  soft  parts  brownish  or  reddish  purple. 

Height  of  corallum  about   23   millim. 
Major  diameter  of  calicle    23        ., 

In  appearence  this  coral  is  exactly  like  a  Caryophyllia^  the  pali,  though  being  present 
before  all  the  septa  except  those  of  the  last  cycle,  standing  in  a  single  ring.  It  has  a  striking 
resemblance  to  the  Paracyathus  pulchellus  (Phil.j  figured  by  Lacaze-Duthiers  in  Arch.  de  Zool. 
Expérim.  (3)  V.  1897,  P'-  VII,  only  the  pali  are  more  regular  than  in  the  last  species.  As 
regards  the  pali,  it  has  a  close  resemblance  to  Paracyathus  coronatus  Duncan  (Proc  Zool. 
Soc,   Lond.,    1876,   p.   432,   pi.   XXXYIII,   Fig.    13). 

14.    Trochocyathus  pileus^   n.   sp.    Plate   II.    Fig.    11,    1  ia. 

Stat.  95.   5°43'.5  N.,    ii9°4o'.  E.  522  m.  4  Ex. 

This  species  appears  to  be  closely  related  to  T.  mitratus  (Goldf.)  from  the  Miocene  of 
Southern   Europe. 

Corallum  shaped  either  like  a  wedge  or  like  a  Phrygian  cap,  conical,  a  good  deal 
compressed,  with  the  base  either  acuminate  ancl  curved  in  the  plane  of  the  minor  axis,  or 
straight  and   truncated.   In   young  specimens  the  corallum   seems  to   be  fixed. 

Costa?  equal,  and  equally  salient  from  calicular  lip  to  base,  all  very  elegantly  and 
evenly   milled   or  serrated  throughout  their  extent. 

The  calicular  fossa  is  not  very  deep  and  is  well  filled  by  the  septa  and  pali.  The  major 
axis  of  the   calicular  orifice   is  on   a   somewhat  lower  plane   than   the  minor. 

The  septa,  which  are  strongly  echinulate,  are  in  six  systems  of  four  cycles,  with  a  fifth 
cycle  developed  in  some  of  the  half-systems.  Those  of  the  first  two  cycles,  which  are  equal, 
are    the    largest   and    far    the    most  exsert,  and  those  of  the  lowest  cycle  are  very  much  more 


i6 

exsert    than    those    which    immediately    precede    them.    Those    of  the  fourth  cycle  usually  unite 
with  those  of  the  third  some  distance  above  the  columella. 

The  pali,  which  are  lamellar  and  echinate,  are  about  30  in  number  and  are  placed 
opposite  all  the  septa  except  those  of  the  last  cycle. 

The  columella,  like  that  of  Tropidocyatluts  lessoni,  to  which  species  Trochocyathus pileus 
is  closely  related,  is  very  variable.  In  one  specimen  it  consists  of  two  rugose  vertical  plates 
placed  end  to  end,  in  another  specimen  it  consists  of  a  single  regular  row  of  teeth,  in  another 
specimen  it  is  a  narrow  spongiform  mass,  while  in  a  fourth  it  consists  of  an  elongate  patch 
of  pinnacles  not  distinctly  delimited   from   the   pali. 

Greatest  height  of  corallum  of  largest  specimen    14  millim. 
Major  diameter  of  calicle  1 5        „ 

Minor  B  10        „ 

In  general  appearance  this  species  has  a  considerable  likeness  to  Tropidocyatluis  lessoni 
without  the  wings.  In  the  young  stage  this  likeness  is  heightened  by  the  presence  of  fairly  prominent 
lateral  costre   not  unlike  the  wings  of  Tropidocyathus  in  an  incipient  state. 

VIII.  Subgenus  Thecocyathus  Edw.  &  H. 

Differs  from  Trochocyathus  in  having  the  thecal  wall  surrounded,  up  to  the  calicular 
margin,  with  an  epitheca. 

The  collection  contains  two  species,  of  which  one  is  represented  by  a  dead  and  broken 
specimen   and  is  referred   to   this  subgenus  with   some   doubt. 

15.  Trochocyathus  (Thecocyathus)  rhomèocolumna  n.  sp.   Plate  II.   Fig.    12. 

Stat.  95.   5°43'.5  N.,    na°40'E.   522   m.    1    Ex.   dead  and   broken. 

The  thecal  wall  is  marked  with  fine  transverse  rugse,  somewhat  as  in  T.  cincticulatus 
mihi.   The  septa   and  pali   are  strongly  echinulate. 

Septa  in  six  systems  and  four  complete  cycles ;  the  primaries  are  large  and  coarse,  as  also 
are,  but  not  to  such  a  marked  degree,  the  secondaries,  both  primaries  and  secondaries  being 
.much  more  exsert   than  the  septa  of  the  lower  cycles.    None  of  the  septa  unite  with  one  another. 

Pali  lamellar,  before  all  the  septa  except  those  of  the  last  cycle ;  those  opposite  the 
tertiaries  are  much  the  largest. 

Columella   formed  of  four  large   rugose   prisms  arranged  in   a   rhomb. 

The  unique  specimen  is  dead  and  broken  and  is  also  the  subject  of  a  malformation  on 
one  side,  so  that  a  completer  diagnosis  is  not  possible. 

16.  Trochocyathus  (Thecocyathus)  virgatus  n.   sp.    Plate   II.   Fig.    13. 

Stat.   105.  6°8'N.,   1210  19' E.  275  m.    1   Ex. 

[Stat.     96,  South-East  of  Pearl  Bank,  Sulu  Archipela^o.    15  m.    1    Ex.] 

This    species  has  a  very  strong  resemblance   to  Paracyathus  striatus  Phil.   [cf.   Duncan, 


'7 

Trans.    Zool.    Soc.     Lond.     VIII,    p.     319,    PI.    XLIIJ.     Figs.    9 — 13   and   X,   p.    240,   PI.    XLIX. 
Figs.  4 — 10)  from  the  Mediterranean,  but  is  not  at  all  compressed  and  has  a  copious  epitheca. 

Corallum  attached,  either  cylindro-conical  or  very  short,  encrusted  to  within  a  ven 
short  distance  of  the  calicular  margin  with  a  thick  dead  epitheca  through  which  costae  here 
and  there  erop  out.  Above  die  well-defined  limit  of  the  dead  epitheca  is  a  vitreous  epitheca, 
which   may  invade  the  lip  of  the  calicle,  but  does  not  conceal  the  trenchant  finely  serrated  costae. 

The  septa,  which  are  in  six  systems  and  four  complete  cycles,  are  very  regular  and 
are  exsert,  those  of  the  first  two  cycles  being  more  exsert  than  those  of  the  third  and  fourth. 
Their  edges  though  thin  and  trenchant  are  finely  crenulate,  and  their  surfaces  are  most  elegantly 
ornamenteel  with  radiating  crenulate  striae. 

The  pali,  which  are  24  in  number,  are  thick,  crenated,  subprismatic  pillars,  placed  in 
two  crowns  opposite  the  septa  of  the  first  three  cycles,  and  particularly  well  delimited  both 
from  the  septa  and   from  the  columella. 

The  columella,  which  is  not  deep-seated.  consists  of  a  large  number  (about  40)  of  small 
granular  discrete  pinnacles. 

The  septa  of  the  first  two  cycles  are  purple-brown,   those  of  the  two  inferior  cycles  are 

white    tinged    with    purple-brown    at  the  edge :  the  pali  and  the  pinnacles  of  the  columella  are 

snow-white. 

Height  of  corallum  20   millim. 

Diameter  of  the  circular  calicle    1  1         „ 

The    specimen    from  Station   96  though  much  shorter,   and  of  denser  and  coarser  consi- 

stence,   is  not  otherwise  distinguishable  from  the  deepwater  type. 

IX.  Subgenus  Tropidocyathus  Edw.  &  H. 

Differs  from  Trochocyathus  only  in  having  the  lateral  costae  expanded  to  form  a  pair  of 
wings.   Even  in  some  species  of  Trochocyathus  the  lateral  costae  are  dentate  or  even  auriculate. 

17.    Trochocyathus  (Tropidocyathus)  Lessoni  Mich.   Plate  II.   Fig.    14,    \\a. 

Flabellum    lessoni    Michelin   in  Guerin's   Magasin  de  Zoölogie,   2m"  section,   Mollusques  et  Zoo- 

phytes    1839 — 1844.   Zoophytes  pi.  6  (1840). 
Tropidocyathus    lessoni    Milne    Edwards    et    Haime,    Annales    des    Sciences    Naturelles,  ser.   3, 

Zoölogie,   IX,   1848,  p.  327,  and  Hist.  Nat.  des  Coralliaires,  II,  p.   57. 

Stat.  59.    io°22'.7S.,  i23°i6'.5E.  390  m.  1  Ex.,  dead. 

[Stat.  49'.  8°23'.5S.,  1 190    4.6  E.  69  m.  3  Ex.] 

[Stat.  260.    5°36'.5S.,  I32°55'.2E.  90  m.  2  Ex.] 

[Stat.  289.    90   o'.  3  S.,  i26°24'.5E.  112  m.  1  Ex.] 

I  have  no  doubt  that  these  all  belong  to  Michelin 's  species,  though  the  form  of  the 
auricles  and  of  the  columella  is  variable.  A  corresponding  variation  is  noticeable  in  the  series 
of  Trochocyathus  pileus  just  described.  Only  one  specimen  was  dredged  in  deepwater  and  that 
was   dead. 

SIROGA-EXPEDITIE    \\\a.  3 


ïS 


X   Paracyathus  Edw.  &  H.,  Duncan. 

It  is  almost  impossible  to  identify  the  species  of  this  genus  without  actual  comparison 
of  specimens.  I  have  restricted  the  term  to  those  species  in  which  the  pali  are  confused  with 
the  columella,  otherwise  I  do  not  see  how  the  line  is  to  be  drawn  between  this  genus  and 
Trochocya  th  u  s . 

18.  Paracyathus  Agassizi  Duncan. 

Paracyathus  agassizi  Duncan.  Transactions  of  the  Zoological  Society  of  London,  VIII,   1S74, 
p.  319,  pi.  XLIII.  figs-.   5—8. 

Stat.  256.  5°26'.6S.,    I32°32'.5E.  397  m.    1   Ex. 

I  identify  the  single  specimen  with  some  doubt,  having  at  first  been  inclined  to  regard 
it   is  a  variety  of   Trochocyathus  (  Thecocyatkus)  virgatus. 

Distribution.    Atlantic,   off  the   coast   of  Portugal,   Arafura  Sea. 

19.  Paracyathus  pruinosus,  n.    sp.   Plate  III,   fig.    17,    lya. 

[Station  96.  S.  E.   of  Pearl  Bank,  Sulu  Archipelago    15    m.   2   Ex.] 

I  include  this  species  among  the  deep-sea  fauna  because,  although  it  was  dredged  in 
only  1 5  metres  of  water,  it  was  associated  with  such  forms  as  Deltocyathus  magnificus,  Tro- 
chocyathus carvophylloides  and  ThccocyatJuis  virgatus,  and  not  with  any  shallow-water  species, 
lts  nearest  relative  is  Paracyathus  striatus  Phil.  (Duncan  Trans.  Zool.  Soc.  VIII  p.  319  and 
X  p.   240),  an   Atlantic  species. 

Corallum  very  dense  and  heavy,  short  or  of  moderate  height,  straight  or  curved,  mode- 
rately  compressed,  and  having  an  encrusting  base. 

Costffi  evenly  scabrous  or  hnely  granular-echinulate,  distinct  only  near  the  calicular 
margin  and  soon  becoming  hidden  by  epitheca. 

Calicle  much  filled  by  crowded  septa  and  oali  and  by  a  large  columella  of  crowded 
pinnacles :  all  these  structures  —  septa,  pali,  and  columella-pinnacles  —  have  a  sort  of  crys- 
talline  appearance,  being  covered  with  close  wavy  lines  of  confluent  or  semi-confluent  granules. 

The  mouth  of  the  calicle  is  elliptical,  and  the  major  axis  is  on  a  very  slightly  lower 
plane   than  the   minor. 

Septa  thick,  very  close-set,  in  six  systems  of  four  cycles  with  a  few  of  a  fifth  cycle  in  some  of  the 
half-systems.  All  are  moderately  exsert,  those  of  the  lowest  cycle  a  little  less  so  than  those  of  the  others. 

Pali  thick,  up-standing,  close-set,  either  prismatic  or  sublaminar,  in  two  crowns,  very  sharply 
delimited  from  the  septa,  and  in  most  places,  but  not  everywhere,  fairly  well  delimited  from 
the  columella.  Those  opposite  to  the  first  two  cycles  of  septa  are  simple,  but  those  opposite 
to   the  septa   of  the  third   cycle   are  very   deeply  cleft   into   two   (sometimes  into  three)  lobes. 

Columella  large,  elliptical,  slightly  convex,  not  deep-set,  consisting  of  a  dense  crowd  of 
discrete   pinnacles  which   are  prismatic   by   mutual   compression. 


19 

Corallum  white  :   the  soft  parts,  in  spirit,  are  also  whitish. 

In    the  type  specimen  the  greatest  height  of  the  corallum  is   28   millim..   the   major  dia- 
meter  of  the   calicle    19.5    millim.,   and   the   minor   diameter   of  the   calicle    15    millim. 

XI.  Deltocyathus  Edw.  &  IL,  Duncan. 
Four    species    of   this    genus    are    represented    in    the    collection,   including  a   magnificent 
specimen   of  D.   magnificus. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  species  of  Deltocyathus. 

I.   Septa  in  six  systems  and  four  complete  cycles : 

1.  Corallum    discoid    or    saucer-shaped :    conspicuous    pali    before   the  septa 

of   the    first  three   cycles \.  D.  italicus. 

2.  Corallum    onion-shaped,    the    pali    before    the  secondary  septa  alone  are 

distinct 2.  D.  lens. 

II.   Septa  in   six  systems  and   five  complete  cycles: 

1.  Corallum   discoid,  dense  septa  echinulate 3.  D.  magnificus. 

2.  Corallum   saucer-shaped,    thin   and   fragile :   septa  non-echinulate.     ...  4.   D.  fragihs. 

20.  DcltoeyalJius  italicus  (Michelotti)   Edw.   &   H. 

Deltocyathus  italicus  Milne  Edwards  et  Haime.  Annales  des  Sciences  Naturelles,  3  ser.,  Zool. 
IX,  1848,  p.  326,  pi.  X.  fig.  11,  and  Hist.  Nat.  des  Coralliaires  II,  56:  Pourtalès,  Bulletin 
of  the  Museum  of  Comp.  Zool.  Vol.  VI,  1879—80,  p.  101,  pi.  I,  figs.  1-  8.  Moseley, 
Challenger  Deep-Sea  Madreporaria,  p.  145.  Jourdan,  Hirondelle  Zoanthaires  (Monaco,  1895) 
p.    16,   pi.   I.   figs.    \\a — d. 

Deltocyathus  agassizii  Pourtalès,  Buil.  Mus.  Comp.  Zool.  Vol.  I,  1863 — 69,  p.  113,  and 
Vol.  V,  1878 — 79,  p.  200 ;  and  Illustrated  Catalogue  of  the  Museum  of  Comp.  Zool.  N°  IV, 
1871,  p.  15,  pi.  II.  figs.  1—5  and  pi.  V.  figs.  9— 10,  and  N°  VIII,  1874,  p.  35,  pi.  VI. 
fig.  11.  Lindström,  K.  Svenska  Vetenskaps-Akad.  Handl.  Bd.  XIV,  1S76,  N°  6,  p.  10, 
pi.   I   &  II,  fig.    13 — 20. 

Stat.  45.  70  24'     S.,  ii8°I5'.2E.  794  m.  1    Ex. 

Stat.  95.  5°43'.5X.,  ii9°4o'     E.   522  m.  1    Ex. 

Stat.  100.  6°  11'.    N.,  i2o°37'.5E.  450  m.  2  Ex. 

Stat.  251.   5°28'.4S.,  1320   o'. 2  E.   204  m.  1   Ex. 

I  do  not  from  the  description  and  figures  appreciate  the  distinction  between  this  species 
and  D.  ornatus  Gardiner.  (On  the  Solitary  Corals  collected  by  Dr.  A.  Willey  :  Willey's 
Zoological   Results  part.   II,   p.    163). 

Distribution.  Atlantic  (West  Indies  and  neighbouring  coast  of  America,  Bermuda,  Azores 
and  E.  Atlantic),  East  Indian  Archipelago  (" Challenger1 '  and  "Siboga"),  South  Pacific.  Miocene 
of  Northern   Italy. 

21.  Dcltocyatlius   lens  n.    sp.    Plate   II.   Fig.    16,    \ba. 

Stat.  59.  io°22'.7S.,  I23°i6'.5E.     390  m.  2  Ex. 

Stat.  95.  5°43'-5  N.,  U9°4o'     E.     522  m.   3  Ex.,  dead. 

Stat.  256.  5°26'.6S.,  i32°32'.5E.     397  m.   1  Ex. 

Stat.  275.  4°52'.5S.,  i2S°37'     E.  4914  m.  3  Ex. 

Corallum  onion-shaped  or  lentiform.  Costa?  all  ecpial  and  all  distinct  from  calicle  to 
base,   sharply  salient  and  elegantly  serrulate. 


20 

Septa  elegantly  echinulate,  in  six  regular  systems  and  four  complete  cycles :  the  primaries 
which  are  the  largest  and  most  exsert,  reach  the  columella ;  the  quaternaries  unite  with  the 
tertiaries    near   the  calicular  margin,   and   the   tertiaries  with  the   secondaries  near  the   columella. 

At  first  sight  the  pali  seem  to  be  in  a  single  crown  situated  opposite  the  secondary 
septa,  but  broad  paliform  lobes  are  also  present  opposite  the  tertiaries  at  the  point  where  the 
quaternaries  unite  with  them.  The  pali  opposite  the  primaries  are  small  denticles  not  distin- 
guishable   from   the  columella. 

The  columella  consist  of  eight  or  ten  denticles  including  those  opposite  the  primary 
septa,   which   perhaps  are   pali. 

Height   of  corallum   3   millim. 
Diameter  of  disk        5         „ 

22.   Deltocyathus  magnificus  Moseley. 

Deltocyathus  magnificus  Moseley,  Proceedings  of  the  Royal  Society,  1876,  p.  662,  and  Challenger 
Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.    147,  pi.   IV.  üg.    10,  pi.   XIII.   figs.    1,   2. 

Stat.     95.    5°43'.5N.,   iiq°4o'     E.   522  m.  5   Ex. 

[Stat.     96.   S.   E.  Side  of  Pearl   Bank,  Sulu  Archipelago    15   m.   7   Ex.] 
Stat.   166?  2°28'.5  S.,    1 3 1  °    3'. 3  E.   118  m.   1   Ex. 

The  specimen  from  Station  166?  is  a  magnificent  one,  perfect,  and  over  28  millim.  in 
diameter.  Those  from  Station  95  are  dead,  broken,  and  discoloured.  Also  from  Station  45 
(7   24'S.,  1 180  1 5'. 2  E.,  794  m.)  are  some  fragments  that  possibly  belong  to  this  species. 

Distribution.   East  Indian   Archipelago. 

22a  Deltocyathus  magnificus  var.  sitlucnsis  nov. 

Stat.     95.   5°43'.5  N.,    U9°4o'      E.   522   m.   2   dead  Ex. 
Stat.    100.  6°ii'     N.,    I20°37'.5E.  450  m.  4   dead   Ex. 

These  six  specimens  resemble  the  typical  Deltocyathus  magnificus  in  everything  except 
that  the  septa  of  the  fifth  cycle,  instead  of  uniting  with  one  another  over  those  of  the  fourth, 
are  either  free  in  all  their  extent  or  merel j'  touch  those  of  the  fourth. 

Corallum  discoidal.  The  horizontal  wall  is  costate,  the  costae  being  all  of  one  size  and 
radiating  from  a  central  scar. 

The  septa  are  in  six  regular  systems  and  five  complete  cycles,  those  of  the  last  cycle 
being  lower  and  very  much  thinner  than  those  of  the  other  four  which,  in  the  largest  specimen, 
are  of  nearly  equal  size,  so  that  the  septa  are  alternately  large  and  small.  All  the  septa  are 
about  equally  exsert  at   the   edge   of  the   disk. 

The  septa  of  the  first  cycle  are  independent  throughout  their  course  to  the  columella  : 
those  of  the  fourth  cycle  unite  over  and  with  those  of  the  third,  and  those  of  the  third  unite 
over  and  with  those  of  the  second.  At  all  these  points  of  union  there  are  paliform  thickenings, 
and  smaller  paliform  nodules  are  present  at  the  ends  of  the  primary  septa.  The  septa  are 
much  worn   but  were  evidently  echinulate. 

The   columella   is   a  spreading,   encrusting,   spongy   mass. 

The  diameter  of  the  largest  specimen  is  about    14.5    millim. 


21 


Though  at  first  sight  the  specimens  which  constitute  this  variety  seem  emphatically 
different  from  Moseley's  Deltocyathus  magnificus,  yet  a  careful  examination  gives  convincing 
evidence  that   the  difference  is  quite  superficial. 

23.   Deltocyathus  fragilis  n.  sp.   Plate  II.   Fig.    15,    15a. 

Stat.  45.  7°  24' S.,    n8°is'.2E.  794  m.  6  Ex. 

Corallum  saucer-shaped,  of  a  thin  vitreous  texture,  its  margin  rather  raggedly  scallopped 
by  the  slightly  exsert  septa  and  costs. 

The  costre  are  fine  trenchant  ridges ;  those  of  the  first  three  cycles  radiate  from  the 
centre  to  the  circumference,  but  those  of  the  lower  cycles  do  not  reach  the  centre. 

The  septa  are  in  six  regular  systems  and  five  complete  cycles  ;  they  are  extremely  thin 
and  are  not  in  the  least  echinulate;  those  of  the  fourth  cycle  unite  with  each  other  over  those 
of  the  third  cycle  some  distance  from  the  columella,  and  those  of  the  fifth  cycle  curl  in  and 
unite  with  those  of  the  fourth  still  further  back.  The  union  of  the  quinaries  with  the  quater- 
naries  is  discontinuous,  so  as  to  give  an  appearance  of  synapticula;. 

Thin,  irregular,  and  ragged  pali  are  present  before  all  the  septa  except  those  of  the 
last  cycle. 

Columella  of  good  size,  of  a  delicate  reticular  and  encrusting  texture. 

From  all  other  species  of  DcltocyatJius  this  is  distinguished  by  its  delicate,  brittle,  vitreous 
texture,  and  thin  non-echinulate  septa.  In  form  and  texture,  and  in  the  synapticula-like  union 
of  the   quinary  with   the   quaternary   septa,   it  resembles    Trochocyatlius  rotulus  mihi. 

The  corallum   of  the  largest  specimen   is    17   millim.   in   diameter. 

XII.  Citharocyathus,  n.  gen. 

Corallum  simple,  cylindro-conical,  free  without  any  tracé  of  early  adhesion,  naked. 
Costre  denticulate.   Columella  fasciculate,  well  developed. 

There  is  a  single  crown  of  pali,  and  each  palus  is  formed  by  the  V-shaped  union  of 
processes  from   the  septa   of  the   third   cycle   in   tront   of  those   of  the  second  cycle. 

This  genus  comes  nearest  to  Deltocyathus,  from  which  it  differs  (1)  in  the  elongate 
cylindro-conical  shape  of  the  corallum,  and  (2)  in  the  form  of  the  pali,  which  are  very  con- 
spicuous  Y-shaped  structures   forming  a   single  very  regular  crown. 

It  also  seems  to  be  very  closely  related  to  Nototrochus  Duncan  (=  Notocyathus  Tenison- 
Woods)  from  which  it  differs  (1)  in  its  cylindro-conical  form,  (2)  in  the  presence  of  a  fasciculate 
columella,    and    (3)    in   the   absence  of  any   paliform   lobes  opposite   the   septa   of  the   first  cycle. 

From  Conocyathus  d'Orbigny,  which  it  also  strongly  resembles,  it  differs  in  having  a 
well  developed  columella. 

The  two  species  which  form  the  genus  Citharocyathus  have  a  striking  resemblance  to 
Turbinolia.  They  also  resemble  the  Conocyathus  zelandia  described  and  figured  by  Martin 
Duncan  in  the  Proceedings  of  the  Zoological  Society  for  1876,  p.  431,  pi.  XXXYIII  fig.   1 — 3. 


24-    Citkarocyathus  conicus  n.   s.    Plate  III.   fig.    18,    18a. 

Stat.  95.   5°43'.5  N.,   ii9°4o'E.   522  m.  2  Ex. 

Corallum  free,  straight,  moderately  elongate,  very  elegantly  cylindro-conical,  ending  in  a  point. 

Costa?  continuous  from  the  pointed  base  to  the  circular  mouth,  broad  and  close-set  but 
very  deep-cut,  crisply  granular  and  denticulate,  all  of  one  size.  Those  corresponding  with  the 
primary  septa  are  independent  throughout  their  course,  but  those  corresponding  with  the  septa 
of  lower   orders  are   united   in  a  series  of  figures  like  the  Greek  letter  di,  by  successive  bifurcations. 

Calicular  margin  nearly  circular.  The  calicle  though  deep  is  much  filled  up  by  the  septa  etc. 

Septa  elegantly  and  copiously  denticulate,  slightly  exsert,  arranged  very  regularly  in  six 
systems  and  four  cycles.  Those  of  the  first  cycle,  which  are  somewhat  the  largest,  are  inde- 
pendent and  ma)-  unite  with  the  small  columella.  Those  of  the  third  cycle  though  not  quite 
so  high  as  those  of  the  second  cycle  are  larger  than  the  latter  (secondaries)  and  meet  in  front 
of  them  (secondaries)  so  as  to  exclude  them  from  the  columella.  The  point  of  union  of  the 
tertiary  septa   is  very  conspicuously   marked  by  a  large,   high,   V-shaped   paliform   lobe. 

These  six  V-shaped  pali,  formed  by  the  union  of  processes  of  the  tertiary  septa,  but 
standing  opposite  the  septa  of  the  second  order,  are  the  only  pali  present.  Like  the  septa  they 
are  echinulate. 

The  septa  of  the  fourth  cycle,  though  much  smaller  and  somewhat  less  exsert  than 
the   others,   descend  deep   into  the   calicle. 

The  columella  consists  of  two  or  three  contorted  granular  processes  fused  together : 
superficially  it  unites  with  the  bases  of  the  six  upstanding  pali,  and  much  deeper  down  it  may 
unite   with   the   six   primary  septa. 

Height   of  the  corallum    8   millim.    Diameter  of  the   calicular  orifice   6. 5   to    7    millim. 

25.    CitharocyatJuis  venustus,   n.   sp.   Plate   III,   fig.    19,    19^7. 

Stat.   59.    io°22'.7S.    123    16'. 5    E.    390  m.  4  Ex. 

This  species  is  essentially  similar  to   Citkarocyathus  conicus,  but  differs  from  it  in  several 
particulars  which  are  quite  independent  of  age. 
These   particulars   are   as   follows. 

(1)  The   cylindro-conical  corallum  is  slenderer  and  considerably   more  elongate. 

(2)  The  septa  of  the  first  three  cycles  are  strongly  exsert,  in  striking  contrast  to  those 
of  C.  conicus.  (Those  of  the  first  cycle  are  the  most  exsert  and  those  of  the  third  cycle  the  least  so). 

(3)  Though  the  septa  are  by  110  means  smooth,  they  are  much  less  conspicuously  denticulate. 
The    height    of   the   largest   of  the   4  specimens  is    10.5    millim.,   and   the   diameter  of  its 

calicular   orifice   is   6   millim. 

Some  fragments  from  Station  159,  411  metres,  which  I  was  at  first  inclined  to  refer 
to  the  genus   ConocyatJms,   probably  belong  to  this  or .  to  the  preceding  species. 


'o 

XIII.  Odontocyathus  Moseley. 

Odontocyathus  Moseley,  Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria  p.    14.S. 

There  are  ihree  dead  and  broken  specimens  in  the  collection  which  are  referable  to  this 
genus  rather  than  to  Stephanotrochus. 

Synopsis  of   the  Siboga  species  of  Odontocyathus. 

I.   Corallum   ;i  bowl  standing  on  legs  formed  by  the  six  primary  costa;: 

i.  Septa  strongly  exsert,   edge   of  bowl  deeply  scallopped i.   O.  sexradiis. 

2.  Septa  little  exsert,  edge  of  bowl  not  scalloped 2.   Odontocyathus  sp. 

II.   Corallum    perfectly  flat,   converted  into  a  star  by  the  six  large  horizontal 

septa  and  costaa  of  the  first  cycle 3-0.  stellet. 

26.    Odontocyathus  sexradiis  n.   sp.   Plate  III.   Fig.    20,    20a — 6. 

Stat.    156.  o°2q'.2S.,    i30°5'.3E.  469  m.   1   Ex. 

The  corallum  is  bowl-shaped,  with  the  edges  very  deeply  scallopped  between  the  enor- 
mously  exsert  primary  septa,  and  is  supported  on  six  long,  strong,  solid,  smooth,  radiating 
legs,   which   correspond   in   situation   with   the   primary   septa. 

The  costs  are  but  little  more  than  ridges  markeel  only  on  the  sides  of  the  bowl,  not 
on   the  base   where  there  is  a   smooth   mammillar   scar. 

The  septa  are  in  six  systems  and  five  cycles,  with  a  sixth  cycle  developed  in  some  of 
the  quarter-systems.  Those  of  the  first  cycle  are  the  largest  and  and  far  the  most  exsert,  and 
they  carry  up  with  them  those  of  the  inferior  cycles  lying  immediately  on  either  side  of  them, 
which  therefore  are  more  exsert  than  all  the  other  septa  of  the  same  and  higher  cycles  below 
the  first.  The  septa  of  the  fourth  cycle  unite  with  those  of  the  thircl  some  way  before  the 
latter  reach  the  columella. 

Pali  are  present,  in  three  crowns,  opposite  the  first  three  cycles  of  septa,  and  in  those 
half-systems  in  which  a  sixth  cycle  of  septa  is  partially  developed  there  are  also  pali  opposite 
the  fourth  cycle.  The  pali  of  the  innermost  crown  are  the  smallest,  and  those  of  the  outermost 
crown   are   the  largest. 

There  is  an  abundant  fasciculate  or  radiculate  columella,  with  which  the  first  three 
cycles  of  septa  unite. 

Major  diameter  of  calicle 43   millim. 

Minor  ,  „        „         34 

Greatest  height,  to  summit  of  the  exsert  primary  septa   28        „ 
Least  height,  in  interval  between  two  primary  septa    .18        „ 

Length  of  rootlets over   20        „ 

This  species  is  evidently  very  closely  related  to  Stephanotrochus  Tatei  Dennant,  from 
the  South  Australian  Tertiaries  (Trans.  Roy.  Soc.  S.  Australia  XXIII.  1898 — 99,  p.  117, 
PI.   III.   Figs.    ia—c). 


?4 
2  7-    Odontocyaihus ?  sp. 

Stat.  262.  5°53'.8S.,   i32°4S'.8E.  560  m.   1   Ex. 

This    is    a    small    dead    and  damaged  specimen,  which   may  possibly  be  the  young  form 

of   the    previous  species.   It  has  six  small  roots,  one  of  which  has  got  out  of  place.   The  septa 
are  little  exsert,  so   that  the  edge  of  the  bowl  is  not  scallopped. 

28.    Odontocyaihus  stella  n.   sp.    Plate  III.,   fig.    21,    2  ia — 1>. 

Stat.    159.  0°  59/1  S.    I29°48.'8E.  411    m.    1   Ex.   dead   and  broken. 

This  species,  like  Odontocyaihus  sexradüs,  has  a  very  close  resemblance  to  Stephano- 
trochus  latei  Dennant.  It  is,  however,  even  flatter  than  5.  tatei  and  has  fewer  septa,  while  the 
combined  septa  and  costae  of  the  first  cycle  besides  being  more  prominent  and  exsert  are  horizontal. 

Corallum  flat,  star-shaped  owing  to  the  remarkable  extension  outwards  of  the  large  and 
strong  costse  and   septa   of  the  first  cycle. 

The  basal  wall  is  covered  with  fine  discrete  granules.  There  is  a  central  scar  of  attach- 
ment,  from  which  six  strong  costae  radiate  horizontally  like  the  spokes  of  a  wheel.  Costae 
corresponding  to   the  lovver  cycles  of  septa   exist  only  near  the   edge   of  the   hexagonal  disk. 

The  septa  are  in  six  regular  systems  and  four  cycles,  with  traces  of  a  fifth.  Those  of 
the  first  cycle  are  the  highest  and  largest,  and  with  the  corresponding  costae  form  the  great 
compressed  spokes  or  rays  which,  projecting  far  beyond  the  edge  of  the  disk,  form  the  cha- 
racteristic  feature  of  this  species.  Those  of  the  2nd  and  3vd  cycles  are  about  equal  to  one  another 
and  unite  near  the  columella.   Those  of  the  4"1   cycle  are  free,  and  do  not  reach  the  columella. 

The  edges  of  all  the  septa  are  ragged  and  their  surface  is  echinulate ;  and  as  the 
margin  oi  the  hexagonal  disk  is  somewhat  concave  between  the  great  ray-like  primary  septa, 
the  septa  of  the  2nd  cycle  are  the  least  exsert  of  all  but  the  quaternaries  that  lie  immediately 
on   either  side   of  them. 

Ragged  paliform  teeth  are  present  in  front  of  all  the  septa  except  those  of  the  last  (fourth)  cycle. 

The  columella  consists  of  a  tortuous  network  of  criply  granular  processes. 

Maximum  diameter  of  disk  12  millim. ;  span  of  corallum  between  the  tips  of  opposite 
spokes   21    millim. 

XIV.  Stephanotrochus  Moseley. 
Stephanotr ochus  Moseley,   Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,   p.    151. 

This  genus  is  represented  in  the  collection  by  4  specimens,  two  of  which  are  deacl  and 
broken  coralla  which  can  not  be  exactly  determined,  though  the)-  possibly  belong  to  5.  weberianus. 

Synopsis  of   the  Siboga  species  of  Stephanotrochus. 

I.    There    are    12    large  and  strongly  exsert  septa,  and  the  septa  of  the  inferior 

cycle  immediately  on  either  side  of  them  are  themselves  remarkably  exsert.      1.   5.  weberianus. 
II.    There  are  21   large  and  much  exsert  septa,  and  the  septa  of  the  inferior  cycle 

immediately    on    either   side  of  them  are   not  more  exsert  than  the  others.     2.   5.   Sibogce. 


25 

2g.  Stephanotrochus  weberianus  n.  sp.   Plate   III.   Fig.   22,   220. 
Stat.   284.   8  43'.!  S.,    i2/°i6'.7E.  82S  m.    1    Ex. 

Corallum  bowl-shaped,  with  a  strong  bulge  and  thickening  where  the  sidewall  joins 
the   base. 

The  base.  which  is  covered  with  a  dull  epitheca,  has  a  central  wart-like  scar  from 
which  costa;  radlate,  the  costoe  of  the  first  two  cycles  being  distinct  but  not  prominent  ridges 
while  those  of  the  lower  cycles  are  fine  strioe. 

On  the  sidewall  the  costse,  which  are  all  granular  and  of  equal  size,  gradually  become 
more  and  more  distinct  as  they   approach   the  calicular  margin. 

The  calicular  fossa  is  circular,  deep,  and  capacious. 

The  septa  appear  to  be  regular,  but  are,  in  fact,  very  irregular  owing  to  the  occasional 
absence  from  some  of  the  half-systems  of  those  of  the  fifth  cycle.  The  primaries  and  secondaries 
(twelve  in  number)  are  large  and  conspicuously  exsert  above  all  the  others ;  they  send  up  a  smal  1, 
oranular,  slightly-inflated,  sinuous  paliform  process  which  is  not  really  distinguishable  from  the 
columella.  Those  of  the  third  cycle  are  smaller  and  much  less  exsert  than  their  predecessors ; 
they  send  off  a  large  triangular  paliform  lobe  long  before  they  join  the  columella  and  in  the 
systems  in  which  five  cycles  are  developed  those  of  the  fourth  cycle  resemble  those  of  the 
third.  Those  of  the  fifth  cycle  (and  of  the  fourth  cycle  in  the  few  half-systems  in  which  a  fifth 
cvcle  is  not  developed)  do  not  join  the  columella,  but  they  descend  deep  into  the  calicle  and 
become  irregularly  serrated  near  their  termination.  The  septa  of  the  inferior  cycle  which  stand 
immediately  on  either  side  of  the  exsert  primaries  and  secondaries  are  themselves  strongly 
exsert.  The  septa  have  a  "dead-polished"  appearance,  but  under  the  lens  they  are  finely 
striated  in  granular  fashion. 

The    columella  consists  of  a  few  granular  and  somewhat  contorted  knobs,  mingled  with 
the  slightly  inflated   paliform   processes  in  which   the   primary  and   secondary   septa  terminate. 
Greatest  height  from   basal  scar  to   summit  .of  the   most   exsert  septa    about   25    millim. 
Diameter  of  calicle „       37        » 

30.   Stephanotrochus  Sibogcv  n.   sp.   Plate  III.   Fig.    23,   23a. 
Stat.     88.  o°34'6N.,    1190    S'.j  E.   1301   m.    1    Ex. 

Corallum  bowl-shaped,  without  any  bulge  where  the  sidewall   meets  the  base. 

The  base,  which  is  covered  with  a  thick,  dead.  deeply-discoloured  epitheca,  has  a  central 
scar  from  which  radiate  sixteen  great,  thick,  coarse  costae;  in  the  furrows  between  these  large 
costse  some   faint  discontinuous  striae  are  sometimes  seen. 

On  the  lower  part  of  the  sidewall  costae  are  indistinct,  but  in  the  upper  two-thirds  there 
are  well-cut,  granular,  subequal  costae  corresponding  to  all  the  cycles  of  septa. 

The  calicular  fossa  is  circular,   deep,   and  capacious. 

The  septa  are  in  six  systems  and  five  cycles  with  a  very  irregular  development  of  the 
fifth    cycle.    In    the    unique    specimen    there    are    74    septa,    of   which    21    are   larger  and  more 

SIBOGA-EXPEDITIE    XVI  tl.  4 


26 

exsert   than  the  others  and  dividé  the  calice  into   2 1    compartments ;  of  these   2  1    compartments 
16  contain  three  smaller  septa  each,  and  5   contain  only  one  smaller  septum. 

The  2 1  large  exsert  septa  merge  with  the  columella,  but  just  before  they  do  so  they 
are  notched,  so  that  at  their  junction  with  the  columella  there  is  a  sort  of  low  paliform 
thickening  —  sinuous  and  very  indistinctly   paliform. 

Of  the  53  smaller  septa,  the  middle  one  in  each  group  of  three  gives  off,  very  low  clown 
in  the  calicle,  a  bold  paliform  lobe,  and  then  either  runs  on  to  the  columella  or  joins  one  of 
the  larger  septa;  while  the  remaining  37,  which  are  narrow,  end  on  the  wall  of  the  calicle. 

The  columella,  which  though  low  is  very  large  and  singularly  compact,  is  made  up 
almost  entirely  of  the  thickened  granular  contorted  impacted  ends  of  the  2 1  large  septa,  with 
but  little  assistance  from  the    1 6  septa  of  the  next  degree. 

Greatest  height  of  corallum  to  the  summit  of  the  most  exsert  septa    about   25   millim. 
Diameter  of  calicle „        37        „ 

Stephanotrochus  sp. 

Stat.   173.  30  27'     S.,    1 3 1°    o'. 5  E.  567  m.   1   Ex. 
Stat.  284.  8°43'.i  S.,    i27°i6'.7E.  828  m.    1   Ex. 

I  do  not  number  these  specimens,  as  I  believe  them  to  be  only  dead  and  broken 
coralla  of  S.  weberianus.  Though  they  are  shallower  than  the  type  specimen  they  have  the 
same  number  (twelve)  of  large  septa,  and  the  same  bulge  or  thickening  where  the  sidewall 
joins  the  base  of  the  corallum. 

XV.  Sabinotrochus  Duncan. 

Sabinotrochus  Duncan,  Transactions  of  the  Zoological  Society  of  London,  VIII,   1874,  p.  320 
(1871),   and  Journal  of  the   Linnean   Society,   Zoology,   XVIII,    1885,   p.   29. 

Two  small  dead  coralla,  which  I  was  at  fïrst  inclined  to  refer  to  Flabellum,  near 
F.  angulare  Moseley,  seem  to  be,   perhaps,  referable  to   this  genus. 

31.   ?  Sabinotrochus  jlatiliseptis  n.   sp.   Plate   IV.    Fig.    24.    24CT. 

Stat.   211.   5°4o'.7S.,    i20°45'.5  E.    1158111.   1   Ex. 

Corallum  saucer-shaped,  with  a  pedicled  scar  of  attachment,  whence  radiate  costse, 
which,  as  well  as  the  furrows  between  them,  are  covered  with   "oolitic"  granules. 

Septa  in  six  systems  and  three  cycles  with  some  traces  of  a  fourth.  Those  of  the  first 
two  cycles  are  large  and  are  remarkably  inflated  and  granular  in  the  middle  of  the  shallow 
calicle,  where  they  meet  to  form  an  umbilicated  columella.  Those  of  the  third  cycle  sometimes 
join  those  of  the  second,  but  more  often  they  end  about  midway  between  the  centre  and  the 
circumference  of  the  calicle. 

Height   of  corallum   about   5    millim. 
Diameter  of  calicle  1 1 


52.   ?  Sabinotrochus  bipatella  n.   sp.   Plate  IV.    Fig.   25,    25a. 

Stat.   52.  9°3'.4S.,    [I9°56'.7E.  959  m.   1    Ex. 

Corallum  discoidal,  with  a  scar  of  attachment ;  granular  costae  are  present,  bul  are 
distinct  only  in  the   peripheral  half  of  the  disk. 

Septa  in  six  systems  and  three  cycles,  with  traces  of  a  fourth.  Those  of  the  first  cycle 
are  the  largest  and  stoutest.  Those  of  the  first  two  cycles  unite  to  form  a  thin  undermined 
disk-like  columella,  which  half  fills  the  shallow  calicular  fossa.  Those  of  the  third  cycle  do  nol 
unite  with  those  of  the  second,  though  they  tend  to  curve  towards  them  ;  they  do  not  usually 
reach   the  columella. 

Heieht   of  corallum  about   2    millim. 
Diameter  of   disk  „        8        „ 

XVI.  Discotrochus  Edw.  &  H.,  Duncan. 

The  collection  contains  clead  coralla  of  two  species  one  of  which  is  undoubtedly,  the 
other  doubtfully,  referable  to  this  genus. 

33.  Discotrochus  dentatus  n.   sp.   Plate  IV.   Fig.   26,   26a. 

Stat.  95.  5°43'-5  N.,  ii9°4o'  E.  522  m.  4  Ex. 
Stat.  98.  6°  9'  N.,  I20°2i'  E.  350  m.  3  Ex. 
Stat.   100.  6°  11'     N.,   i20°3/'.5E.  459  m.    1   Ex. 

Nearly  related  to  D.  investigatoris  mihi  (Journ.  Asiatic  Soc.  Bengal,  LXII,  pt.  2,  1893, 
p.  142,  PI.  V,  Fig.  5,  5a)  from  which  it  differs  in  having  the  septa  less  crowded  though 
more  numerous. 

Corallum  quite  flat  and  discoidal,  of  thick  coarse  texture.  On  the  horizontal  base  is  a 
faint  scar  of  attachment  from  which  numerous  equal   well-cut  costae  radiate. 

Septa  hardly  exsert  beyond  the  thick  peripheral  margin,  in  six  systems  and  five  cycles, 
the  fifth  cycle  being  incomplete  in  a  few  of  the  half-systems.  The  septa  of  the  fifth  cycle  are 
thin,  but  those  of  all  the  other  cycles  are  coarse  and  have  their  edges  deeply  and  coarsely 
serrated  throughout.  Though  the  septa  of  the  first  cycle  are  distinctly  the  largest,  those  of  the 
second  and  even  of  the  third  cycle  are  not  very  much  smaller.  There  is  no  union  of  septa, 
except  at  the  columella,  where  those  of  the  first  three  cycles,  and  usually  of  the  fourth  cycle 
also,   meet. 

The  columella,  which  is  small  and  fascicular  and  consists  of  little  but  the  united  ends 
of  the   septa,   is  studded   with   a   few  coarse  subprismatic  granules. 

The  diameter  of  the   disk   of  the  largest  specimen   is    19   millim. 

34.  ?  Discotrochus  sp. 

Stat.  95.  5°43'.5  N.,    11 9° 40' E.  522  m.  2  Ex. 
This  is  a   little  clead   and  eroded  corallum,   and   cannot   be  accurately  placed.    It   is  solid, 


2S 

thick,  quïte  flat  and  disk-like,  but  has,  radiating  from  its  margin,  six  or  eight  short  stout  sharp 
spokes  like  those  of  Odontocyathus .  There  is  a  large  reticulate  and  encrusting  columella,  and  the 
septa,  which  are  in  four  cycles  of  which  the  last  is  incomplete,  appear  to  have  been  coarsely 
serrated.  There   are  no  signs  of  pali. 

XVII.  Desmophyllum   Ehrenberg,   E.   &   H.,   Duncan. 

Three  species  are  found  in  the  Siboga  collection,  one  of  them  being  very  young  and 
therefore  not  specifically  recognizable.  Of  the  other  two,  one  is  the  well  known  D.  crista-galli, 
and  the  other  is  a  new  species  characterized  by  the  obscurity  of  the  lower  cycles  of  septa  which 
are  buried  deep  in   the  calicle. 

35.  Desmophyllum  crista-galli  Edw.  &   H. 

Desmophyllum  crista-galli  Milne  Edwards  &  Haime,  Ann.  Sci.  Nat.,  Zool.,  (3),  IX,  184S,  p. 
253,  pi.  VII,  fig.  10 ;  and  Hist.  Nat.  Corall.,  II,  p.  76:  Saville  Kent,  Ann.  Mag.  Nat. 
Hist,  (4),  VI,  1870,  p.  459  (=  D.  Rusci  Duch.  &  Mich.):  Martin  Duncan,  Trans.  Zool. 
Soc,  VIII,  1874,  p.  321,  pi.  XLI,  figs.  10 — 15  (=  D.  cumingi  E.  &  H.  and  D.  costatum  E. 
&  H.):  Pourtalès,  Buil.  Mus.  Comp.  Zool.,  V,  1878 — 79,  p.  203  (=  D.  reflexum  Duch.  & 
Mich.  and  D.  Rusci  Duch.  &  Mich.). 

Stat.  259.  5°29'.2S.,    i32°52'.5E.  487.  m.  2  Ex.,  dead. 

Two  dead  specimens,  one  young,  the  other  fullgrown,  both  with  the  exsert  portions  of 
the  septa  somewhat  broken,  are  certainly  this  species. 

Distribution.   Atlantic,   Mediterranean,   Indo-Pacific,  and  Tertiary  deposits  of  Italy. 

36.  Desmophyllum  sp. 

Stat.     95.   5°43'.5  S.,   ii9°40'.    E.   522.  M.   1   Ex. 

This  is  a  very  young  specimen  and  cannot  be  identified  with  any  certainty :  it  cannot 
be  referred  to  the  next  species  with  which  it  was  associated  in  life. 

37.  Desmophyllum  alabastrum   n.   sp.   Plate   IV.   Fig.    27,    2  7<?. 

Stat.     95.   5°43'.5N.,   ii9°4o'E.   522  m.   1   Ex. 
Stat.   105.  6°  8'       N.,    1210  19' E.  275   m.   1    Ex. 

Corallum  elongate-goblet-shaped,  nearly  straight,  little  compressecl,  with  a  stout  cylin- 
drical  peduncle  and  an  encrusting  base. 

There   are   no   costa;,   but  wavy  transverse  growth-lines   are  visible   in   places. 

Septa  thin,  finely  granular,  in  six  regular  systems  and  four  cycles ;  but  as  the  septa  of 
the  two  inferior  cycles  are  very  fine  and  narrow  and  occur  only  in  the  depths  of  the  calice 
and  do  not  reach  anywhere  near  the  calicular  margin,  there  appear  to  be,  at  first  sight,  only 
two  cycles  of  septa.  The  septa  of  the  second  cycle  are  narrow,  but  they  extend  up  to  the 
calicular    margin,    though    they    are    narrower    there    than    they    are  in   the   clepths   of  the  fossa. 


Those    of   the    first    cycle    alone    are    large    and    conspicuous;    they   are    a   little  exsert,  a  little 
unequal  in  size,  and  they  descend  straight  to  the  very  bottom  of  the  cup,  where  they  meet. 
Corallum  snow-white,  the  pedicle  with  a  faint  cinnamon-brown  suffusion. 

Greatest  heigfht  of  corallum    iS   millim. 
Major  diameter  of  calicle  8        „ 

Minor  „  „  7     •    » 

The  characteristic  feature  of  the  corallum  of  this  species  is  the  burial  of  the  septa  of 
the  3rd  and  4!h  cyclcs  in  the  depths  of  the  cup  where  at  first  they  escape  notice.  lts  nearest 
relative  seems  to  be  D.  simplex  Verrill  (American  Journal  of  Science  and  Arts,  1870,  p.  371) 
from  the  West  Indies. 

XVIII.  Flabellum  Lesson,  E.  &  H.,  Duncan. 

The  identification  of  the  species  of  this  genus  presents  difficulties  which,  in  the  absence 
of  actual  types  for  comparison,  are  insuperable ;  tor  many  of  the  species  are  not  only  highly 
variable,  but  they  also  undergo  radical  changes  of  form  in  the  course  of  growth,  these  changes 
affecting  the  shape  of  the  corallum,  the  form  and  size  of  the  columella,  and  the  number  of  the 
septa.  Xo  one  can  be  more  dissatisfied  than  I  am  myself  with  the  present  attempt  to  determine 
the   large   number  of  forms   collected   by  the    "Siboga". 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  Deep-sca  species  of  Flabellum. 

Corallum  free  or  becoming  so:  — 

I.  Corallum  shaped  like  a  fully-open  fan :  — 

1.  Septa   in   six  or  more  cycles:  — 

I.   The  larger  septa  form  48  compartments  each  of  which 
contains    3    smaller   septa:    the  circumference  of  the 

corallum    is   less  than  a  semicircle \.  F.  distinctum. 

II.  The  larger  septa  form  48  compartments  each  of  which 
contains  7  smaller  septa:  the  circumference  of  the 
corallum   is  much   more  than  a  semicircle    .     ...     2.  F.  lamellulosum.  . 

2.  Septa    in    5    cycles,    the    last    cycle    incomplete :   lip  of  calicle 

jagged 3.  F.  laciniatum  var. 

II.  Corallum  shaped  like  a  nearly-open  fan:  septa  in  5  complete  cycles: 

lip  of  calicle  jagged 4.  F.  suluense. 

III.  Corallum  either  a  half-open  fan,  or  a  compressed  conc :   — 

1.  Septa  in   six  or  more  cycles:  — 

I.   Lateral  costaï  sharp  or  jagged 5.  F.  australe. 

II.    No  lateral   costa; 6.  F.  latnm. 

2.  Septa  in   fïve  cycles,  the  fifth  cycle  incomplete;  lateral  costa? 

sometimes  spinose 7.  F.  irregulare. 

3.  Septa  in  four  cycles :   no  lateral  costae 8.   F.  dens. 

IV.  Corallum    an    open    oval    cup:   septa   in  five  cycles,   with  the  inferior 

cycles  incomplete 9.  F.  japonicum. 


3° 

38.  Fl abel  In  ui  distinctum  Edw.  &   H. 

Flabellum  distinctum  Milne  Edwards  et  Haime,  Ann.  Sci.  Nat.,  3  ser.,  Zool.,  IX,  1848,13.262, 
and  Hist.  Nat.  Corall.  II,  80.  Duncan,  Trans.  Zool.  Soa,  London,  VIII,  1S74,  p.  322, 
pi.  XXXIX.  figs.  1  — 13.  Wyville  Thomson,  Depths  of  the  Sea,  pp.  431,  432.  Jourdan, 
Hirondelle  Zoanthaires  (Monaco)    1895,   p.   26,   pi.   II.   figs.    12,    13. 

Flabellum  patens  Moseley,  Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,   p.    172,  pi.   VI.  figs.  4a,  $a. 

Stat.     12.  70  15      S.,    ii5°is'.6E.  289  m.  2  Ex. 

[Stat.     51.   Madura   Bay  &  Molo-Strait.      69 — 91    m.  4  Ex.] 
[Stat.    166.  2°28'.5S.,   1310    3'.3  E.  118  m.   1    Ex.] 

The  two  dead  coralla  from  Station  1 2  are  almost  certainly  this  species,  but  I  am  not 
quite  so  confident  about  the  other  specimens. 

Distribution.  E.  Atlantic  (Azores  and  coast  of  Portugal),  East  Indian  Archipelago  and 
Japan  :   fossil   in   the   Miocene   of  Southern   Europe. 

39.  Flabellum   lamellulosum  n.   sp.   Plate   IV.   Fig.    28,    28^ — b. 

Stat.  251.   5°28'.4S.,   i32°o'.2E.  204  m.    1   Ex. 

Corallum  snow-white,  of  excessively  thin  and  translucent  texture,  shaped  like  a  widely- 
stretched  fan,  its  circumference  being  equal  to  about  285  degrees  of  a  circle.  There  is  a  slender 
short  pedicle,  and  the  lateral  costae,  which  arch  outwards  and  downwards,  are  sharp  and  finely 
and  irregularly  jagged.  The  two  faces  of  the  corallum  are  slightly  concave  and  moderately 
everted,  are  traversed  by  faint  radiating  costse,  and  are  ver)-  faintly  marked  with  fine  wavy 
transverse  accretion-lines. 

The  septa,  which  are  very  thin,  are  in  the  unique  specimen  336  in  number.  Forty-eight 
large  ones  of  equal  size  divide  the  calicle  into  48  compartments  each  of  which  contains  7 
smaller  septa  of  diminishing  size.  Of  these  7  septa  the  largest  one  (fifth  cycle)  does  not  descend 
quite  to  the  level  of  the  columella,  the  two  next  largest  (sixth  cycle)  do  not  descend  quite 
half-way  down  the  calicular  wall,  and  the  four  smallest  (incomplete  seventh  cycle)  are  very 
short.  The  surfaces  of  the  septa  are  finely,  sharply,  and  somewhat  sparsely  granular,  and  their 
edges  as  they  descend   in   the   calicle  become  sinuous,   especially   in  the  case  of  the  larger  septa. 

The  columella,  which  is  deep-seated  and  narrow,  is  formed  by  small  trabecula;  from  the 
48   large  septa   of  the   first   four  cycles. 

Greatest  height   of  corallum  39   millim. 

Maximum   diameter  of  corallum   47         „ 

This  species  is,  evidently,  nearly  related  to  F.  pavoninum,  but  the  corallum  forms  an 
arch  of  more  than  three  quarters  of  a  circle  and  the  septa  are  nearly  twice  as  numerous. 

40.  Flabellum  australe   Moseley. 

Flabellum  australe  Moseley,  Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.  173,  pi.  VII.  figs.  ^a.  $a,  b. 
Stat.   251.   5°28'.4S.,    i32°o'.2E.   204  m.    1    Ex. 


This  species,  which  is  otherwise  not  different  from  /•'.  distincfoim,  is  distinguished  by 
the  density  and  weight  i>f  tin-  corallum  and  by  the  more  than  usual  cutting  away  of  the  septa 
near  the  calicular  margin.  Under  the  thin  film  of  living  tissue  which  covers  the  outer  surface 
of  the  thecal  wall  in  the  neighbourhood  of  the  calicular  margin  a  Polychaete  is  embedded,  in 
the  single   "Siboga"   specimen. 

Distribution.   Off  South-east  coast  of  Australia  ;   Arafura  Sea. 

Flabellum  sp. 

Stat.  38.  7°35-.4S.,  ii/°2S'.6E.  521  m.  1  Ex. 
Stat.  316.  7°  19.4  S.,    il 6° 49'. 5  E.   538  m.    1   Ex. 

These  two  specimens,  although  preserved  with  the  living  tissues,  are  not  iclentifiable, 
owing  to  irregularity  of  growth  due  to  uneven  repair  after  damage.  Their  coralla  have  the 
density  and  weight  of  F.  australe.  In  other  respects  they  resemble  F.  paripavoninum  mihi, 
from  the  depths  off  the   Laccadives. 

4 1 .  Flabellum   latuw   Studer. 

Flabellum  latum  Studer.  Monatsber.   d.   Kngl.   Preussischen  Akad.   der  Wissenschaft,  zu  Berlin 
(1877)    1878,  p.  630,  Taf.   I.   Fig.   3«— b. 

Stat.   105.  6°8'N.,   1210  19' E.  275   m.    1    Ex. 
Distribution.  South   Pacific,  off  New  Zeeland ;  Sulu  Sea. 

42.  Flabellum   laciniatum,   Phil.   var.   messum. 

Flabellum  laciniatum  var.   Alcock.   Investigator  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,   p.   23. 

Stat.  45.  70  24'  S.,  n8°i5'.2E.  794  m.  3  Ex. 
Stat.  284.  8°43'.iS.,  i27°i6'.7E.  828  m.  t  Ex. 
Stat.  314.  70  36'     S.,   H7°3o'.8E.  694  m.    1    Ex. 

This  variety  resembles  a  F.  laciniatum  in  everything  except  that  the  ten  large  sej)ta 
of  the  first  two  cycles  that  occupy  the  faces  of  the  thecal  wall  are  only  moderately  exsert, 
instead  of  forming  deep-cut  petaloid  lobes.  It  thus  looks  like  a  F.  laciniatum  of  which  the 
petaloid  lobes  of  the  calicular  margin  have  been  chipped  away.  As  in  F.  alabastrum  Mosely 
the   sides  of  the  corallum   are   more   or  less  pinched  in   near  the   middle. 

43.  Flabellum  suluense  n.   sp.   Plate  IV.   Fig.    29,    29^ — b. 

Stat.   100.  6°n'N.,    1200  37'. s  E.  450  m.   1   Ex.  dead. 

Corallum    compressed,    shaped  like    a    nearly    full-spread    fan,    the   margin   of  the  calicle 

being    a    little    less    than  a  semicircle,  the  ends  being  concave,  and  the  faces  flat.     Remains  of 

a    pedicle    of   attachment  are  present.  The  costae  are  mere  strise  :  the  margin  of  the  calicle  is 
rather  finely  jagged. 


The  septa  are  in  six  systems  and  five  complete  cycles ;  their  surfaces  have  the  usual 
rows  of  discrete  granules.  Those  of  the  first  three  cycles  are  equal  and  alone  form  the  colu- 
mella ;  their  vertical  margins  are  very  strongly  sinuous.  Those  of  the  fourth  cycle  descend  as 
low  as  the  columella,  but  do  not  join  it.  Those  of  the  fifth  cycle  do  not  descend  halfway  down 
the  calicular  wall. 

Colour  pale  cinnamon,  somewhat  streaky. 

Height  of  corallum  15  millim.;  major  diameter  of  month  of  calicle  23  millim.,  minor 
diameter    10   millim. 

This  species,  though  its  texture  is  much  coarser  and  denser,  seems  to  have  its  nearest 
relative  in   F.   laciniatum  var.   messum. 

44.  Flabellum  ?  irregulare  Semper. 

Flabellum    irregulare   Semper.    Zeitschrift    f.    wiss.    Zool.    Bd.    XXII,    1872,    p.  242,  pi.  XVI. 

fig-    7—  !/• 

Stat.  253.    5°4S'.2S.,    I32°i3'     E.   304  m.    1    Ex. 
[Stat.     491.  8°23'.5S.,    1 19°    4.6  E.     69  in.   2  Ex.] 

45.  Flabellum  deus  n.   sp.   Plate   IV.   Fig.    30,   30*7. 

Stat.  95.  5°43'5  N.   U9°40'E.  522  m.  9  Ex. 

Corallum  elongate,  narrowly  conical,  strongly  compressed,  without  costae  of  any  kind, 
but  with  very  faint  transverse  growth-rings.  The  major  axis  of  the  calicular  orifice,  which  is 
as    125   is  to   50,   is   on   a   very   slightly  lower  plane  than  the   minor. 

Calicular  fossa  very  deep.  Septa  stout  and  strongly  crimped ;  those  of  the  first  three 
cycles  are  equal,  and  unite  to  form  the  columella,  those  of  the  fourth  cycle  are  about  half  the 
depth  of  those  of  the  first  three  cycles,  while  those  of  the  fifth  cycle  are  present  in  onlv  a 
few  half-systems  :  consequently  the  usual  arrangement  of  the  septa  is  a  large  one  alternating 
with  a  small  one. 

Height  of  corallum  16       millim. 

Major  diameter  of  calicle    12.5         „ 

Minor  „  „  5 

This  species  appears  to  be  very  nearly  related  to  F.  transversale  Moseley  (Challenger, 
Deep-Sea  Madreporaria,  p.  1  74,  PI.  VI,  Fig.  6).  Another  species  to  which  it  is  closely  relatecl 
is  F.  fastigatuiu  Dennant  (Trans  and  Proc.  Roy.  Soc.  S.  Australia,  XXIII.  1S98 — 99,  p.  113, 
PI.    II,   Fig.    ia — 6)  from   the  Tertiaries  of  Victoria. 

46.  Flabellum  japonicum    Moseley. 

Flabellum  japonicum  Moseley.  Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.  168,  pi.  VII.  fig.  3», 
pi.  XVI.  fig.  12.  Marenzeller.  Zool.  Jahrbucher,  Syst.  Abth.  III,  1888,  p.  45.  —  Alcock, 
Investigator  Ueep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.   23. 


Stat.  ij.  /°28'.5S.,  ii  5°  28'  E.  1060  m.  1  Ex. 
Stat.  18.  7°28'.2S.,  ii5°24'.6E.  1018  m.  7  Ex. 
Stat.   212.   50  54.5  S.,    I20°I9'.2E.     462   m.    1    Ex. 

In  none  of  these  specimens  are  the  costae  so  prominent  as  they  are  in  specimens  from 
Indian  Seas. 

The  specimen  from  Station  212  is  singular  in  having  the  corallum  elongate  and  com- 
pressed.  with  the  lateral  costae  sharp  and  almost  cristiform,  and  the  septa  increased  innumber; 
it.   however,   has   all   the   look   F.  japonicum   from   which    I   am   not   inclined   to  separate   it. 

Distribution.   Off  Japan,  Java  Sea,   Bay  of  Bengal  and  Arabian  Sea. 

XIX.  Placotrochus  Edw.  &  H.,  Duncan. 

47.    Placotrochus   Candeanus  Edw.   &   H. 

Placotrochus    Candeanus    Milne    Edwards    et    Haime.    Ann.    Sci.    Xat.    Zool.    3    sér.  IX,    1848, 
p.   283,  and   Hist.   Xat.  Corall.   II,  99. 

Stat.   12.  7°I5'S.,    H5°I5'.6E.  289  m.   1   Ex. 

Distribution.   China  Sea,  Java  Sea. 

XX.  Placotrochides  n.  gen. 

Two  small  dead  and  somewhat  broken  coralla  of  the  "Siboga"  collection  might  be 
referred  to  Placotrochus  E.  &  H.,  but  for  the  presence  of  a  large  fascicular  columella  almost 
as  abundant  as  that  of  Caryophyllia.  From  Platytrochus  E.  &  H.  they  are  separated  by  the 
absence  of  the  characteristic  lateral  costse,  and  by  a  certain,  apparently  normal,  irregularity 
of  growth. 

Corallum  simple,  compressed,  free  (or  attached  ?),  indistinctly  costate.  A  pellicular  epitheca 
may  be  present.    Columella  essential,  elongate,  ancl  fascicular.   Septa  little  exsert.     Xo  pali. 

4S.   Placotrochides  dcutiformis  n.   sp.   Plate   IV.    Fig.    31,    $\a. 
Stat.   59.    io°22'.7S.,    123°  16'. 5  E.   390  m.    1    Ex.   dead. 

Corallum  free,  simple,  compressed,  acutely  wedge-shaped,  fairly  elongate,  curved  in  the 
plane  of  the  major  axis  apparently  in  consequence  of  increased  growth  at  one  end. 

The  costse,  which  correspond  in  number  with  the  septa,  are  almost  worn  away,  but 
appear  to  have  been  low,  broad,  and  equal  —  except  that  01/c  of  the  lateral  costae  seems  to 
have  been  more  prominent  than  any  of  the  others. 

The  calicular  orilïce  is  ovate,  not  regularly  elliptical :  the  axial  diameters  are  as  3:2, 
and  the  major  axis  is  on   a  slightly   lower   plane   than   the   minor. 

The  septa,  which  are  coarse,  are  in  six  systems  and  three  cycles  with  a  fourth  cycle  in 
a  few  of  the  half-systems.  Those  of  the  lïrst  two  cycles  are  the  largest  and  reach  the  columella, 

SIBOGA-EXPEDITIE    XVI  O.  5 


34 

their  surface  being  coarsely  granular  and  their  vertical  edge  wavy.  Those  of  the  lower  cycles 
do   not   reach   the  columella. 

The  columella,  which  consists  of  numerous  coarse  anastomosing  curls,  is  elongate,  pro- 
minent,  and  not  very  deep-seated. 

Heioht  of  corallum  8  millim.;  major  diameter  of  mouth  of  calicle  6  millim.,  minor 
diameter  4  millim. 

49.   Placotrochides  scaphula  n.   sp.    Plate  IV.   Fig.    32,    32*7. 
Stat.   212.   50  54.5  S.,    I20°iq'.2E.  462   m.    1    Ex.,  dead. 

Corallum  simple,  compressed,  extremely  short,  broad-based  as  if  it  had  been  broadly 
attached,   shaped  like  a  flat-bottomed  boat. 

The  costce  are  almost  obscured  by  a  thin  ripple-marked  epitheca  on  the  side-wall,  but 
are   distinct  enough   on   the   base. 

The  calicular  orifice  is  ovate,  not  regularly  elliptical,  one  end  being  very  much  sharper 
than  the  other;  its  axial  diameters  are  as  7:4,  and  the  minor  axis  is  on  a  slightly  lower 
plane  than  the  major. 

The  septa,  which  are  thin,  are  arranged  as  if  in  eight  systems  of  three  cycles,  and  the 
majority  of  them  reach  the  columella  :   their  surface  is  sharply  but  very  sparsely  denticulate. 

The  columella  is  a  large  oval  reticulum  of  thin,  crisply-curled  processes,  and  has  a 
sunken  look,   owing  to  its  septal  junctions  being  higher  than  its  centre. 

Height  of  corallum  between  2  and  3  millim.;  major  diameter  of  mouth  of  calicle  7 
millim.,   minor  diameter  4   millim. 


II.   Family  Oculixid.e   Duncan. 
Two  genera  of  this  family  are  represented  in  the   "Siboga"  collection. 

XXI.  Amphihelia  Edw.  &  H.,   Duncan. 

Cf.    Martin    Duncan.    Trans.    Zool.    Soc.    London  VIII,    1874,   pp.   323 — 327  and  Journ.   Linn. 
Soc.  Zool.  XVIII,   1884—85,  p.  39. 

The  collection  includes  representatives  of  four  species  of  this  genus. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  species  of  Amphihelia. 

I.    Mouths  of  calicles  over  2   millim.   in  diameter: 

1.  Calicles  shallow:   costal  striations  short  and  indistinct l.  A.  oculata. 

2.  Calicles    of   moderate  depth :   110  costse,  coenenchyma  dense  and 

very  smooth 2.  A.  arbuscula. 

3.  Calicles    deepish :    costal    striations    long,  sinuous  and   distinct.     .     3.  A.  ratnea. 


35 

II.  Mouths   of  calicles   about    2  millim.    in  diameter:  outer  wal]  of  calicles 

with   line  longitudinal  rows  of  fine  granules 4.  .!.  tennis. 

50.  Ampkihelia  oculata  Linn.,  Edw.  &   H. 

Amphihelia  oculata  Milne  Edwards  et  Haime.  Ann.  Sci.  Nat.  Zool.  3  sér.  XIII.  1850,  p.  85, 
and  Mist.  Nat.  Corall.  II,  119  (ubi  synon.).  Martin  Duncan,  Trans.  Zool.  Soc.  Lond.  VIII, 
p.  326,  pi.  XLV.  figs.  1 — 3.  Lacaze-Duthiers,  Archiv.  de  Zool.  Expérim.  3  sér.  V,  1897, 
p.   142,  pi.  VIII.  figs.   1 — 7. 

Stat.   267.     5°54'S.,    i32°s6'.7E.  9S4  m.  A  dead  fragment. 
Stat.  297.   io°39'S.,    i23°4o'     E.  520  m.  A  small  branch. 

In  the  Indian  Museum  there  is  a  large  piece  of  this  species  from  the  N.  Atlantic 
("  Cfrudan"  Expedition)  some  of  the  smaller  branches  of  which  agree  in  every  respect  with  the 
Siboga  fragment  from  Station  297.  As  to  the  identity  of  the  small  dead  fragment  from  Station 
267,   I  am  not  quite  certain. 

Distribution.   N.   Atlantic,    Mediterranean,   deep  basins  of  East  Indian  Archipelago. 

51.  Amphihelia   ramen    Muller,   Duncan. 

Amphihelia  rautca  Martin  Duncan.  Trans.  Zool.  Soc.  Lond.  VIII,  1874,  p.  326,  pi.  XLIV. 
figs.    1 — 3,  pi.  XLV.  figs.  4 — 6,  pi.  XL VI.  figs.   1  — 19. 

Stat.     95.   5°43'.5N.,    ii9°4o'     E.   522  m.  Two  dead  fragments. 
Stat.    156.  o°29'.2  S.,    1300    5'-3  E.  469  m.   Some   dead   fragments. 
Stat.   251.   5°28'.4S.,    1320    o'.2  E.   204  m.   Some  fine  branches. 

According  to  Martin  Duncan  all  Diplohelice  with  costal  strise  are  referable  to  this 
species,  which  thus  includes  Amphihelia  mioecsnica  Seguenza,  Amphihelia  atlantica  and  ornata 
Duncan,  Diplohelia  meneghiniana  and  doder leinia  and  sismondiana  Seguenza,  and  Diplohelia 
ftrofunda  Pourtalès.  The  last  named,  however,  is  a    Coenopsammia. 

The  fine  specimens  which  I  identify  with  this  variable  species  exhibit  very  close  and 
regular  budding  and  but  slight   tendency  to   anastomosis. 

Distribution.   Both  sides  of  N.   Atlantic,  East   Indian   Archipelago;  Sicilian  Tertiaries. 

52.  Amphihelia  arbuscula   Moseley. 

Lophohelia  arbuscula  Moseley.  Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.  1S0,  pi.  VIII.  figs.  9.  10. 

Stat.      12.   70  15'      S.,    11 50  15'. 6  E.  289  m.  Two  small  fragments. 
Stat.     95.   5°43'.5X.,    U9°4o'     E.   522   m.   Numerous  branches. 
Stat.    156.  o°29'.2  S.,    1300    S'.3  E.  469  m.  A  small  fragment. 

This  species  cliffers  from  A.  oculata  chiefly  in  the  greater  density  of  the  coenenchyma 
and  the  polish  of  its  surface,  and  in  the  greater  depth  of  the  calicles.  In  some  of  the  calicles 
there   are   small   paliform   lobes   on   the  septa   of  the  second  cycle. 

Distribution.   East   Indian   Archipelago. 


36 

53-   Ampliihclia   tenuis  Moseley. 

Lophohelia  tenuis  Moseley.  Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.    180,  pi.  VIII.  figs.  n  — 14. 

Stat.  95.   5°43'.5  N.,    1  i9°4o'  E.   522   m.  A  small  fragment. 

There    is    no    coenenchyma ;    the    calicles    are    small  long  and  trumpet-shaped,  and  their 
outer  surface  is  longitudinally  striped  with  rows  of  fine  rounded  granules. 
Distribution.  Off  the   Philippines. 

XXII.  Sclerohelia  Edw.  &  H.,  Duncan. 

54.  Sclerohelia   formosa   Alcock. 

?  Cyathohelia  formosa  Alcock.   Investigator  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.   26,   pi.  III.  figs.  2,  2a. 

Stat.  289.  9°o'.3S.,    i2Ó°24'.5E.    112  m.  Several  pieces. 
Distribution.   Off  the  Maldives :  off  Celebes. 


III.   Family  Astr.eid.e  Edw.   &   H. 
The  collection  contains  but  one  species  of  this  family. 

XXIII.  Pourtalosmilia  Duncan. 

Blastosmilia  Duncan.  Trans.  Zool.  Soc.  Lond.  X,    1877 — 79,  p.  244  (1878). 
Pourtalosmilia  Duncan.  Journ.   Linn.   Soc.   Zool.   XVIII.    1884 — 85.   p.  72   (1884). 

55.  Pourtalosmilia  dumosa  n.   sp.   Plate  V,   fig.    33,   33^. 

Stat.    156.  o°29'.2S.,    1300    5'-3  E.  469  m.  Some  dry  branches. 
Stat.   259.   5°29'.2S.,    I32°52'.5  E.  487   m.  A  fragment. 

The  parent  corallum  is  long,  straight  or  slightly  sinuous,  cylindrical,  and  of  the  same 
diameter  throughout :  it  gives  off,  on  every  side,  buds  which  grow  out  into  branches  like  but 
shorter  than  the  parent,  and  these  again  give  off  a  few  short  secondary  branches :  the  primary 
and  secondary  branches  may  unite  to  form  a  bush  with  scalariform  ramifications.  The  whole 
outer  surface  of  the  corallum  is  covered  with  fine  discrete  granules  and  is  traversed  by  fine 
granular  costal   striations. 

The  calicular  orifice  is  circular  and  the  fossa  extremely  deep.  The  fossa  is  but  little 
encroached  upon  by  the  non-exsert  septa,  which  are  in  six  systems  and  three  cycles,  those  of 
the  first  cycle  being  much  larger  than  those  of  the  second  which  again  are  a  little  larger  than 
those  of  the  third.  All  the  septa  are  thin,  entire,  and  sometimes  microscopically  granular  or 
spicular. 

The  septa  of  the  first  cycle  unite  at  the  bottom  of  the  calicle,  but  there  is  no  columella. 

The  dissepiments  are  thin  sheets  of  vitreous  tissue  placed  very  far  apart. 


37 
The  diameter  of  the  calicle  of  the  parent  and  of  full-grown  buds  is  about   3.5   millim. 

I  place  this  species  in  Martin  Duncan's  genus  Pourtalosmilia,  without  however  being 
able  to  appreciate  the  difference  between  this  genus  and  the  Triassic  and  Jurassic  genus  Goniocora. 
In  external  form  this  species  much  resembles  the  Caryophyllia  arbuscula  figured  by  Dana  on 
plate   27  of  his   "Zoophytes." 


MADREPORARIA  FUNGIDA. 

IV.   Family   Lophoserid.k   Martin   Duncan. 
Only   two  genera   of  this  family   are  represented  in   the  collection. 

XXIV.  Bathyactis  Moseley. 

Bathyactis  Moseley.  Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.   185. 

The    collection    contains    four   species,   one  of  which  is  doubtfully  referred  to  this  genus, 
since  it  has  a  crown  of  large  and  very  distinct  pali  opposite  the  septa  of  the  second  order. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  species  of  Bathyactis. 

I.    No  pali  distinguishable : 

1.  Septa  in  four  complete  cycles \.  B.  symmetrica. 

2.  Septa  in   five  complete  cycles: 

I.  Basal    wall    flat,   septa  low 2.  B.  Sibogce. 

II.   Basal    wall    very    concave,    septa  very  high 3.  B.  stephana. 

II.    A  crown  of  pali  opposite  the  septa  of  the  second  order 4.  B.  palifera. 

56.   Bathyactis  symmetrica   (Pourtalès)   Moseley. 

Fungia    symmetrica    Pourtalès.    Illustr.    Catalogue    Mus.    Comp.    Zool,   N°  IV,    1871,   p.  46,  pi. 

VII,    figs.    5,    6:    Martin    Duncan,    Trans.   Zool.    Soc.    VIII.    1873 — 74,    p.    334,    pi.    XLIX, 

figs.    16 — 19. 
Bathyactis    symmetrica    Moseley.    Challenger    Deep    Sea    Madreporaria,    p.    186,    pi.    XI,    figs. 

1  — 13:    Jourdan,   Zoanchaires  du  yacht  1'Hirondelle  (Monaco,    1895,  p.   28):   Alcock  Investi- 

gator  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,   p.   28. 

Stat.     12.    70  15'     S.,  U5°is'.6E.  289  m.  1  Ex. 

Stat.     18.    7°28'.2S.,  ii5=24'.6E.  101S  m.  8  Ex. 

Stat.     59.  io°22'.7  S.,  i23°i6'.5E.  390111.  1  Ex. 

Stat.     95.    5°43'.5X.,  ii9°4o'     E.  522   m.  9  Ex. 

Stat.   178.    20 40'     S.,  i28337'.5E.  S35   m.  3  Ex. 

Stat.  20S.    50  39'     S.,  1220  12'     E.  1886  m.  1  Ex. 

Stat.  241.    40 24.3  S.,  I29°49'.3E.  1570  m.  1  Ex. 

-Label  lost" 28  Ex. 

Distribntiou.    All   the   Oceans,   from    32   to   2900   fathoms. 


38 


57-  Bathyaciis  stephana  Alcock. 


Batliyactis  stephana  Alcock.  Journal  Asiatic  Soc.  Bengal,  Vol.   LXII,  pt.  2,   1893,  p.  149,  pi. 
V,  figs.    12,    iza,  and  Investigator  Deep  Sea   Madreporaria,   p.   28,   pi.   III,   fig.    5,   ^a. 

Stat.  88.  o°34'.6N.,   H9°8'.5E.   1301   m.   1    Ex. 

3    small    fragments    from   49a   may  also  possibly  belong  to  this  species:  their  texture  is 
much  stronger  and  denser,  but  this  may  be  the  result  of  shallow-water  conditions. 
Distribution.   Bay  of  Bengal,  Macassar  Strait. 

58.  Bathyaciis  Sibogee  n.   sp. 

Stat.  95.?  5°43'.5N.,  119  40'     E.  522  m.  1  Ex. 

Stat.  159.     o°S9'.i  S.,  i29°48'.8E.  411  m.  1  Ex. 

Stat.  175.     2°37'.7S.,  I30°33'.4E.  1914  m.  1  Ex. 

Stat.  297.   io°39'     S.,  i23°4o'     E.  520  m.  1  Ex. 

It  is  unnecessary  to  give  a  lengthened  description  of  this  species,  as  it  agrees  with  B. 
symmetrica  in  all  respects  except  that  (1)  the  septa  are  more  numerous,  being  in  5  complete 
cycles  instead  of  4,  and  (2)  the  texture  of  the  corallum  is  even  more  delicate.  It  is  also 
much   larger. 

From  B .  stephana,  which  also  has  5  cycles  of  septa,  it  cliffers  in  having  the  basal  wall 
flat  instead  of  deeply  concave,  and  the  septa  low  instead  of  very  tall. 

Diameter  of  largest  specimen   57   millim. 

59.  Bathyactis  palifera  n.  sp.   Plate  V.   Fig.   34,   34a. 

Stat.     98.  6° 9'     N.,   1200  21'     E.  350  m.  2  Ex. 
Stat.    153.  o°3'.8N.,   i30°24'.3E.    141   m.   3  Ex. 

Corallum  discoidal :  basal  wall  nearly  flat,  with  fine,  low,  but  distinct,  discretely-granular 
radiating  costae. 

Septa  in  six  systems  and  five  complete  cycles,  those  of  the  first  cycle  being  free,  but 
those  of  the  other  cvcles  combinirigf  to  form  six  beautifullv-regfular  deltas.  In  the  first  three 
cycles  the  septa  rise  up  as  high  crest-like  lobes,  which  are  traversed  by  elegant  parallel  serru- 
late  strise  :  those  of  the  first  cycle  are  considerably  the  tallest,  those  of  the  third  cycle  consi- 
derably  the  lowest. 

There  are  six  large,  foliaceous,  upright,  isolated  pali  —  one  opposite  to  each  of  the 
second  cycle  where  these   are  joined  by  the  septa  of  the   third   cycle. 

The  columella,  which  is  small  and  umbilicate,  is  formeel  by  the  union  of  the  12  septa 
of  the  first  two  cycles. 

The  septa  are  echinulate,  but  besides  this  there  are  five  (ir  six  concentric  series  of  synapti- 
culae,   which   are   most  distinct  in  the  neighbourhood  of  the   1  2  large  septa  of  the  first  two  cycles. 

Diameter  of  corallum  17    millim. 

Greatest   height  of  corallum   6        „ 

Only  dead  coralla  were  dredged. 


39 

XXV.  Cycloseris  Edw.  &  11. 
Stat.   ioo.  6°ll'N.,    i2o°37'.5E.  450  m.    1    Ex.,   dead  and  worn. 

óo.    The    single    corallum    dredged    is  dead  and  much  ground  down,   so  that   its  specific 
identity  is  lost. 


MADREPORARIA  PERFORATA. 

V.   Family  Eupsammid.e  Edw.   &   H  ,   Duncan. 

Five  genera,  including  subgenera,   are  represented  in  the  collection. 

XXVI.  Stephanophyllia  Michelin,  Edw.  &  H.  Duncan. 

Both  of  the  Challenger  species  were  dredged  by  the  Siboga,  along  with  a  new  and 
nearly-related  species. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  species  of  Stephanophyllia. 

I.    The  columella  is  a  spongy  mass:  the  primary  septa  are  quite  independent     .      1.  5.  formosissima. 
II.    The  columella  is  an  elongate  vertical  lamella : 

I.   The  primary  septa  are   in  contact,   near  the  middle,  with  the 

deltas  on  either  side 2.  S.  complicata. 

II.  The  primary  septa  are  independent 3-5.  fungulus. 

6 1 .   Stephanophyllia  formosissima   Moseley. 

Stephanophyllia    formosissima    Moseley.    Proc.    Roy.    Soc.    1876,  p.   561,  and  Challenger  Deep 
Sea  Aladreporaria,   p.   201,   pi.   IV,  fig.    11,  pi.   XIII,   figs.  6,  7,   pi.  XVI,  figs.   8,  9. 

Stat.     95.     5°43'.5N.,  U9°4o'     E.   522  m.  2  Ex.  (small  and  dead). 

Stat.     95.  ?            n  ,,                    „2  Ex.  (large,  living). 

Stat.  256.     5°26'.6S.,  i32°32'.5E.   397  m.   1  Ex.  (small,  dead). 

Stat.   302.   io°27'.9S.,  I23°28'.7E.  216  m.    1  Ex. 

The  Siboga  specimens  were  obtained  in  much  the  same  place  as  those  of  the  Challenger, 
namely  off  the  Philippines  and  off  the  Kei  Islands,  with  the  additional  locality  further  south 
denoted  by  Station   302. 

61a.   Stephanophyllia   formosissima   Moseley,   var. 

Stat.     45.  70  24'     S.,   ii8°is'.2E.  794  m.    1   Ex. 
Stat.  2S4.  8°43'.iS.,    i2fi6.jE.  82S  m.   1   Ex. 

Though  at  first  sight  these  two  specimens  seem  to  be  something  obviously  distinct,  a 
detailed  comparison   reveals  nothing  of  specific  value. 

They    differ    from    the    typical    form    in  the  height  and  texture  of  the  septa.  The  septa, 


4o 

though  much  thinner  and  frailer,  are  singularly  free  from  perforations  and  their  edges,  though 
wavy  and  jagged,  are  not  dentate  :  those  of  the  first  two  cycles  are  as  high  as,  or  even  higher 
than,  any  of  the  others. 

62.  Stephanophyllia  complicata   Moseley. 

Stephanophyllia  complicata  Moseley.   Proc.  Roy.  Soc,    1876,  p.   558,  and  Challenger  Deep  Sea 
Madreporaria,  p.    198,  pi.  IV,  lig.  2,  pi.  XIII,  figs.   3—5. 

Stat.     59.   io°22'./S.,   I23°i6'.sE.   390.  m.  3  Ex.,  (dead). 
Stat.   256.      5°26'.6S.,    I32°32'.5E.   397.   m.    1    Ex.,   (dead). 

These  are  small  dead  specimens:  the  one  from  Station  256  is  certainly  this  species, 
but  there  is  some  doubt  about  the  others  which  are  considerably  damaged.  They  were  dredged 
in   nearly  the  same  place  as  the   "Challenger"  specimens. 

63.  Stephanophyllia  fungulus  n.   sp.   Plate   V.    Fig.    35,    35 rt — b. 

Stat.    100.  6°n'N.,    I20°37'.5E.  450  m.   5   Ex.,  all  dead. 

As  in  5.  complicata  and  certain  other  species,  the  columella  (which  is  a  stout  upstanding 
lamina)  stands  in  a  star-shaped  fossa,  and  each  ray  of  the  star  is  bisected  by  a  primary  septum. 

Corallum  of  coarsish  texture,  circular,  without  tracé  of  adherence,  the  under  surface  or 
wall   flat  or  only  very  slightly  convex,   the  upper  surface  very  strongly  and  evenly  convex. 

Costse  of  equal  size,  distinct  from  centre  to  edge  of  disk,  bifurcating  again  and  again  until 
they  become  96  in  number.   The  perforations  between  the  costse  form  over  20  concentric  rows. 

Septa  strongly  convex,  coarsish,  with  the  edge  more  or  less  crenate,  in  six  systems  and 
fïve  complete  cycles.  Those  of  the  isl  cycle  are  independent,  except  that  they  are  united  with 
the   immediately-adjacent   quinaries  by  a  few  trabecula?. 

Perhaps  the  most  conspicuous  of  all  the  septa  are  the  two  quinaries  in  each  system 
which  lie  next  to  the  primaries  that  bound  the  system  :  these  quinaries  curve  inwards  and  finally 
unite  with  each  other  in  front  of  the  secondaries,  a  paliform  nodule  often  marking  the  point 
of  junction.  The  two  outermost  quinaries  in  each  system  form,  in  fact,  a  delta  so  connected 
with  the  septa  of  all  the  other  cycles  (except  the  independent  primaries)  that  these  appear  to 
arise  from   the  delta  by  a  series  of  successive   and  very  regular  bifurcations. 

The  calicular  space  not  included  within  the  deltas  has  the  form  of  a  beautifully-regular 
six-rayed  star,   each   ray  of  which   is  longitudinally  bisected   by  a   primary  septum. 

The   columella  is  a  stout  vertical   plate,  the  free  edge  of  which  may  be  entire  or  crenate. 

The  shallow  calicular  fossa,  the  sides  of  the  columella,  and  the  edges  of  the  septa  are 
sometimes  studded  with  coarse  granules. 

The  diameter  of  the   largest  specimen  is    15   millim. 

This  species  is  closely  related  not  only  to  S.  complicata  Moseley  (from  which  it  is 
distinguished  by  the  characteristic  predominance  of  the  outermost  quinaries  of  each  system),  but 
also  to  5.  implexa  Dennant,  from  which  it  difters  emphatically  in  having  a  stout  laminar  columella. 


4i 

XXVII.  Balanophyllia  Searles  Wood,  Edw.  &   II.  Duncan. 

Besides  somc  dead  and  indeterminable  fragments,  three  species  of  this  genus  are  included 
in  the  collection. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  Deep-sea  species  oj   Balanophyllia. 

I.    Corallum    fixed,    elongate,    fistulous,    curved    or    sinuous,    cylindrical,  not 

increasing  in  diameter  from  base  to  calicle Balanophyllia  sp. 

II.    Corallum  fixed,  gradually  expanding  from  base  to  calicle: 

i.  Septa  of  the  first  two  cycles  equal,   much  larger  than  those  of 

the  fourth  cycle i.     B.  cornu. 

il.  Septa  of  the  first  cycle  much  the  largest,  very  thick  and  spongy : 
the  septa  of  the  fourth  cycle  which  adjoin  the  primaries  are 
much  larger  than  those  of  the  second  cycle,  which  they  meet     2.     B.  parvula. 

64.  Balanophyllia   sp. 

Stat.   107.  6°  i'.5  N.,    I2I°28'E.  270  m.    1    Ex. 

I  am  unable  to  identify  this  species,  and  as  it  is  dead  and  worn  I  do  not  care  to  name 
it.  It  is  an  elongate  pipedike  form  like  Balanophyllia  (Tliecopsammia)  fistula,  from  which  it 
differs  in  having  a  large  prominent  compact  columella  made  up  of  twisted  lamelle,  much  like 
that  of  Balanophyllia  (  Thecopsammia)  gemma   Moseley. 

65.  Balanophyllia   cornu  Moseley. 

Balanophyllia  cornu  Moseley.   Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madraporaria,  p.   192,  pi.  XII,  figs.  11  — 15. 
Stat.  297.   io°39'S.,   i23°4o'E.   520  m.   1   Ex. 

Though  the  beautiful  specimen  which  I  identify  with  this  graceful  species  differs  from 
the  three  individuals  described  by  Moseley  in  having  the  septa  more  exsert,  I  believe  it  to  be 
the  same. 

Jourdan  ( "Hirondelle"  Zoanthaires)  identifies  this  species  from  the  N.  Atlantic  in  the 
neighbourhood  of  the  Azores.  The  "Challenger"  specimens  came  from  off  the  Kei  Islands,  and 
the    "Siboga"   specimens  from   the  sea   south   of  Timor. 

66.  Balanophyllia  parvula   Moseley. 

Balanophrllia  parvula  Moseley.  Challenger  Deep  Sea  Madreporaria,  p.   194,  pi.  XV,  figs.  9,  ga. 

Stat.  251.   5°28'.4S.,    i32°o'.2E.  204  m.   1   Ex. 

The    single    specimen  of  this  singularly  beautiful  species  has  all   the  well-marked  specific 
characters  described  by  Moseley,   and  only  differs  in  being  taller  and  more  elegantly  pedicellate. 
Dislribution.   Celebes  Sea,   Banda  Sea. 

SIBOGA-EXPEDITIE    XVI(7.  6. 


QC 


42 

XXVIII.  Subgenus  Thecopsammia  Pourtalès. 
Thecopsammia  Pourtalès.  Illust.  Cat.  Mus.  Comp.  Zool.,  N"  IV,   1871,  p.  43. 
The  collection  contains  two  species  referable  to  this  genus. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  Dcep-Sea  species  of  Thecopsammia. 

I.    Corallum  very  elongate,  fistulous  or  vermiform,  of  nearly  equal  diameter  throughout 

its  length:   columella  small  and   reticulate \.    T.  fistula. 

II.    Corallum    expanding    gradually    from    pedicle    to    calicle:    Columella    large    and 

compact,   made  up  of  twisted  lamellae, 2.    T.  gemina. 

67.  Balanophyllia  (Thecopsammia)  gemma  Moseley. 

Thecopsammia  gemma    Moseley.    Challenger    Deep    Sea    Madreporaria,    p.    195,    pi.    XV,    fïgs. 
8,  8a— b. 

Stat.  297.    io°39'S.,    i23°4o'E.  520  m.    1   Ex. 
Distribution.  Sulu-Celebes  Sea,   Sea  south  of  Timor. 

6S.   Balanophyllia  (Thecopsammia)  fistula   n.   sp.    Plate  V.    Fig.    36,    36a. 

Stat.    105.  6°  8'     N.,    1210  19' E.   275   m.   2  Ex. 
Stat.   107.  6°i'.5N.,   i2i°28'E.  270  m.    1   Ex. 

Corallum  greatly  elongate,  vermiform,  subcylindrical  and  of  nearly  equal  diameter  throughout, 
covered   with  a  thin  epitheca  beneath  which  it  is  granular  and  very  indistinctly  costate. 

Calicular  orifice  broadly  elliptical,  with  the  lip  thickened.  Septa  not  exsert,  in  six  systems 
and  four  complete  cycles,  thick  and  spongy  at  the  junction  with  the  calicular  margin,  thin  and 
finely  granular  or  spicular  elsewhere.  Those  of  the  first  cycle  are  much  the  largest ;  those  of 
the  second  cycle  are  large,  but  do  not  quite  reach  the  columella;  those  of  the  fourth  cycle 
are  a  good  deal  larger  than  those  of  the  third,  towards  which  they  curve  and  in  front  of 
which  they  meet. 

Columella  elliptical,   prominent,   loosely  spongy,   fairly  deep-seated. 
Length   of  broken  corallum   95.00   millim. 
Major  diameter  of  calicle         7.00        „ 
Minor  „  „        „  6.00 

What  look  like  secondary  corallites,  produced  by  budding,  may  be  present  on  the  dead 
part  of  the  corallum,  far  from  the  calicle;  but  they  are  separate  individuals  which  have  simply 
settled  there,  as  is  shown  by  the  fact  that  when  they  are  detached  the  wall  of  the  original 
o  trallum  is  found  intact. 


XXIX.  Subgenus  Coenopsammia  Edw.  &  H. 

Synopsis  of  the  Siboga  Deep-sea  species  of  Coenopsammia. 

The    caliclcs    are    empty-looking,    owing    to    the    septa,    which    are    subequal,    being    Iittle    more 
than   ridges: 

i.  Corallites  subcylindrical,  the  mouths  of  the  calicles  about  four  millim. 
in    diameter: 

I.  Corallites    on    both    sides    of  the   branches,   none  in  the  axils      i.   C.  profunda. 
II.  Corallites    usually    present    in    the    axils  of  the  branches  and 

on  only  one  side  of  the  branch 2.  C.  amphelioid.es. 

2.  Corallites  funncl-shaped,  the   mouths  of  the  calicles  about  2  millim.  in 

diameter:  no  coenenchyma 3.   C.  pusilla. 

69.  Dendrophyllia  (Coenopsammia)  profunda   Pourt. 

Diplohelia  profunda  Pourtalès.  Buil.  Mus.  Comp.  Zool.  Vol.  I,   1863 — 69,  p.   114. 
Dendrophyllia  profunda    Pourtalès.    Buil.    Mus.  Comp.   Zool.   Vol.  V,    1878 — 79,   p.   208,   pi.   I. 
figs.  6—8. 

Stat.  266.  s°56'.5S.,   i32°47'.7E.  595  m.  2  Ex. 

At  first  sight  this  species  would  be  taken  tbr  an  Amphihclia  (Diplohelia),  as  indeed 
it   at  first  was  by  Pourtalès. 

Distribution.   Gulf  of  Mexico  :   Banda  Sea  :  Sea  off  Ceylon. 

70.  Dendrophyllia  (Coenopsammia)  amphelioides  n.   sp.   Plate   V,   fig.    37,    37^. 

Stat.   156.  o°29'.2S.,   1300    5'. 3  E.     469  m.  Some  dead  fragments. 
Stat.    177.   2°24'.5S.,    I29°38'.5E.    1633   m.   Some  fine   branches. 

This  species  is  very  closely  related  to,  if  it  is  not  identical  with,  Coenopsammia  scillce 
Seguenza  (Mem.  Accad.  Sci.  Torino  2  Ser.  XXI,  1864,  p.  519,  tav.  xiv.  fig.  2).  Like  Den- 
drophyllia profunda  Pourt.,  it  at  first  sight  strongly  simulates  an  Amphihclia,  for  which  in 
my  preliminary  sorting  of  the  collection   I   mistook  it. 

Colony  dendroid,  gemmation  taking  place  near  the  calicular  margin  and  being  alternately 
distichons  or,  more  commonly,  dichotomous  leaving  the  parent  calicle  immersed  and  more  or 
less  compressed  between  two  branches,  as  in  CyatJioIiclia.  The  openings  of  the  calicles  all  tend 
to  face  one  way,  and  are  commonly  circular  (except  in  the  axils). 

Costal  striations  all  equally  distinct,  in  the  form  of  finely  scabrous  vermicular  ridges 
traversing  the  whole  length  of  the  colony. 

The  calicles  after  budding  are  Iittle  prominent,  or  even  almost  immersed:  they  are  deep 
and  empty-looking  owing  to  the  shallowness  of  the  septa. 

Septa  approximately  equal,  elegantly  notching  the  somewhat  tumid  margin  of  the  calicle 
hut    not    exsert,    not  encroaching    on    the    calicular  fossa.    They  are  in  six  regular  systems  and 


44 

three  cycles :   those  of  the  third  cycle  usually  unite  with  those  of  the  second  near  the  columella, 
but  those    of  the   first  cycle  usually  remain  independent. 

Columella  deep-seated,   always   present,   but  variable   in   size,   spongy  and   crisp. 

Diameter   of  calicles  about   4   millim. 

From   D.  profunda   Pourt.   this  species  is  distinguished   by  the  following  characters : 

(1)  The  corallites  all  face,  or  tend  to  face,  one  way,  leaving  one  face  of  the  dendroid 
colony  quite  bare  : 

(2)  The  budding  is  frequently  dichotomous,  with  a  corallite  sunk  in  the  axil  between 
two  branches,  and  after  budding,  the  corallites  project  very  little: 

(3)  The  vermicular  strise  of  the  corallites  and  coenenchyma,  though  bold  enough,  are 
not  so   coarse  as  in   D.  profunda  : 

(4)  The   mouths  of  the  calicles  are  larger,   owing  to  the  lip  being  less  swollen : 

(5)  The  septa  of  the  3rd  cycle  are  more  nearly  equal  to  those  of  the  other  two  cycles, 
and   they  almost  always   unite   with   the   secondaries : 

(6)  The  tissue  forming  the  columella   is  more  abundant. 

71.   Dendrophyllia  (Coenopsammia)  pusilla  n.  sp.    Plate  V.  Fig.   38,   38a. 
Stat.  95.   5°43'ó  N.,   iiq°4o'E.   522  m.   2  Ex. 

This  is  another  species  that  at  first  sight  simulates  an  Amphihelia,  having  a  strong 
resemblance  to   A.   tennis  Moseley. 

Colony  made  up  of  corallites  which  bud  laterally  near  the  calicular  margin  in  an  alternate- 
distichous   (occasionally  dichotomous)   arrangement,   without   coenenchyma. 

The  surface  of  the  corallum  is  frosted  with  sharp  little  granules,  but  there  is  no  striation 
or  vermiculation. 

The  corallites  are  elongate  and  funnel-shaped,  with  very  deep  empty-looking  calicles,  the 
mouths  of  which   are  a   little   oblique. 

Septa  subequal,  in  six  systems  and  three  cycles,  those  of  the  third  cycle  uniting  with 
those  of  the  second  :  they  are  not  exsert  and  are  very  shallow,  projecting  but  little  into  the 
calicular  fossa. 

There  is   no   columella. 

Lensjth   of  a  corallite  about   6   millim. 

Diameter  at  base  „        2         „ 

Diameter   of  calicular  orifice  2         „ 


45 


IV.    LIST  OF  THE  LOCALITIES  WHERE  THE 
SIBOGA  DEEP  SEA  MADREPORARIA  WERE  DREDGED. 


STATION  12.  7°i5'S.,  ii5°i5'.6E.  East  of  Madura  Strait,  289  M.  Caryophyllia  davits  var.  trans- 
versalis  Mos.,  Flabellum  distinctum  E.  &  H.,  Placotrochus  candeanus  E.  &  H.,  Amphihelia  arbuscula  Mes., 
Bathyactis  symmetrica  Pourt. 

STATION    17.  7°28'.5S.,    115°  28'     E.  East  of  Madura  Strait,    1060  M.  Flabellum  japonicum  Mos. 

Station  18.  7°28'.2S.,  II5°24'.6E.  East  of  Madura  Strait,  10 18  M.  Flabellum  japonicum  Mos., 
Bathyactis  symmetrica  Pourt. 

Station   3S.  7°35'.4S.,    ii7°28'.6E.   Off  Paternoster  Is.,   521    M.  Flabellum  australe':  Mos. 

STATION  45.  7°24'  S.,  ii8°is'.2E.  Off  Paternoster  Is.,  794  M.  Caryophyllia  scobinosa  n.  sp.,  Delto- 
cyathus  italicus  Mich.,  Deltocyathus  fragilis  n.  sp.,  Flabellum  laciniatum  Phil.  var.  messum  Alc,  Stephano- 
phyllia  fonnosissima  Mos.  var. 

STATION   52.  90  3'. 4  S.,   119°  56'./ E.  Sandahvood  Strait,  959  up  to  36  M.  Sabinotrochus  bipatella  n.  sp. 

STATION  59.  io°22'.7S.,  I23°i6'.5  E.  S.  of  Timor,  western  entrance  of  Samau  Strait,  390  M.  Caryo- 
phyllia ephyala  Alc,  Citharocyatkus  venustus  n.  sp.,  Flabellum  sp.,  Placotrochides  dentiformis  n.  sp., 
Tropidocyathus  lessoni  Mich.,  Deltocyathus  lens  n.  sp.,  Bathyactis  symmetrica  Pourt.,  Stephanophyllia  com- 
plicata  Mos.,  Balanophyllia  sp. 

Station  88.  o°  34'.6  N.,  ii9°8'.5E.  Northern  end  of  Macassar  Strait,  1301  M.  Stephanotrochus  Sibogm 
n.  sp.,  Bathyactis  stephana  Alc. 

Station  90.  i°i7'.5X.,  1 18°  53'  E.  Northern  end  of  Macassar  Strait,  281  M.  Caryophyllia  quadra- 
genaria  n.  sp. 

Station  95.  5°43'.5  N.,  ii9°4o'E.  Southern  end  of  Sulu  Sea,  522  M.  Caryophyllia  clavusQ)  Scacchi, 
Caryophyllia  ephyala  Alc,  Conotrochus  fiaiicolumna  n.  sp.,  Cyathoceras  Tydemani  n.  sp.,  Trochocyathus 
pileus  n.  sp.  Thecocyathus  rhombocolitmna  n.  sp.,  Citharocyatkus  couicus  n.  sp.,  Deltocyathus  italicus  Mich.. 
Deltocyathus  magnificus  Mos.,  Deltocyathus  magnificus  var.  sulueusis  nov.,  Deltocyathus  leus  n.  sp.,  Disco- 
trochus  dentatus  n.  sp.,  Discotrochus  sp.,  Flabellum  dens  11.  sp.,  Desmophyllum  alabastrum  n.  sp.,  Desmo- 
phyllum  sp..  Amphihelia  ramea  Muil.,  Amphihelia  arbuscula  Mos.,  Amphihelia  tennis  Mos.,  Bathyactis  sym- 
metrica Pourt.,  Bathyactis  Sibogce  n.   sp.,   Stephanophyllia  fonnosissima  Mos.,   Coenopsammia  pusilla  n.  sp. 

Station  96.  South  east  side  of  Pearl  Bank:  Sulu  Archipelago,  15  M.  Trochocyathus  caryophylloides 
n.  sp.,  Thecocyathus  virgatus  n.  sp.,  Paracyathus  pruinosus  n.  sp.,  Deltocyathus  magnificus  Mos.  [Although 
they  were  dredged  in  shallow  water  these  are  all  deep-sea  forms]. 

Station  98.  6°9'N.,  i20D2i'E.  Southern  end  of  Sulu  Sea,  350  M.  Discotrochus  dentatus  n.  sp., 
Bathyactis  palifera  n.  sp. 


46 

Station  ioo.  6°  1 1'  N.,  1200  37'. 5  E.  Southern  end  of  Sulu  Sea,  450  M.  Caryophyllia  clavusfi)  Scacchi, 
Conotrochus  funicolumna  n.  sp.,  Deltocyathus  italicus  Mich.,  Deltocyathus  magnificus  var.  suluensis  nov., 
Discotroclius  dentatus  n.  sp.,  Flabellum  suluense,  n.  sp.,  Stephanophyllia  fungulus  n.  sp.,   Cycloseris  sp. 

STATION   ioi.  6°  15'  N.,    i20°2i'E.  Sulu   Sea,    1270  M.   Caryophyllia  cultrifera,  n.  sp. 

STATION  102.  6°4'.i  N.,  I20°44'E.  Southern  end  of  Sulu  Sea,  535  M.  Caryophyllia  scobinosa  n.  sp., 
Ceratotrochus  sp. 

Station  105.  6°8'  N.,  I2i°ic/E.  South-eastern  end  of  Sulu  Sea,  275  M.  Cyathoceras  Tydemani 
n.  sp.,  Thecocyathus  virgatus  n.  sp.,  Desmophyllum  alabastrum  n.  sp.,  Flabellum  latum  Studer,  Thecopsam- 
mia  fistula  n.  sp. 

Station  107.  6°  i'.5  N.,  I2I°28'E.  South-eastern  end  of  Sulu  Sea:  Channel  between  the  islands  of 
Sulu  and  Bangalao,  270  M.  Balanophyllia  sp.,   Thecopsammia  fistula  n.  sp. 

Station  150.  o°6'      N.,   i2o,°7'.2E.   1089  M.  Phlceocyathus  hospes  n.  sp. 

Station  156.  o°2c/.2S.,  i30°5'.3E.  469  M.  Odontocyathus  sexradiis  n.  sp.,  Amphihelia  ramea  Muil. 
Amphihelia  arbuscula  Mos.,  Pourtalosmilia  dumosa  n.  sp.,   Ccenopsammia  amphelioides  n.  sp. 

STATION  159.  O0  59'.  1  S.,  129°  48'. 8  E.  411  M.  Lochmmotrochus  oculeits  n.  sp.,  Odontocyathus  s/cl/a 
n.  sp.,  Bathyactis  sibogic  n.  sp.,   Citharocyathus  (?)  sp.,    Ceratotrochus  (?)  sp,,   Caryophyllia  (?)  sp. 

Station  166.  2°28'.5S.,  i3i°3'.3E.  Between  Misool  and  New-Guinea,  118  M.  Deltocyathus  magnificus 
Mos.  (?)  Flabellum  distinctum  E.  &  H.  [Deep-Sea  species  though  dredged  in  shallow  water]. 

Station   173.  3°27'     S.,   i3i°o'.5    E.     567  M.  Stephanotrochus    Weberianusï 

STATION   175.   2°  if.y  S.,    I30°33',4E.    1914   M.  Bathyactis  Siboga  n.   sp. 

Station  177.  2°24'.5  S.,  i29°3S'.5  E.  1033  to  1300  M.  Caryophyllia  panda  n.  sp.,  Coenopsammia 
amphelioides  n.  sp.,  Stephanophyllia  formosissima  Mos. 

Station   178.  2°4o'     S.,  12S0  37'. 5  E.  North  off  Ceram,  835   M.  Bathyactis  symmetrica  Pourt. 

STATION  208.   5°39'     S.,  I22°i2'     E.  Flores  Sea,    1886  M.  Bathyactis  symmetrica  Pourt. 

Station  211.  5°4o'.7  S.,  I20°45'.5  E.  Flores  Sea,   11 58  M.  Sabinotrochus  flatiliseptis  n.  sp. 

Station  212.   5°54'.5.S.,  I20°I9'.2E.  462  M.  Flabellum  japonicum  Mos. ,  Placotrochides  scaphula  n.  sp. 

STATION   241.  4°24'.3S.,  I29°49'.3  E.  Banda  Sea,    1570  M.  Bathyactis  symmetrica  Pourt. 

STATION  251.  5°28'.4S.,  1320  o'. 2  E.  Banda  Sea,  204  M.  Caryophyllia  ephyala  Alc,  Caryophyllia 
quadragenaria,  n.  sp.,  Trochocyathus  caryophyllioides  n.  sp.,  Deltocyathus  italicus  Mich.,  Flabellum  lamellu- 
losum   n.   sp.,  Flabellum  australe   Mos.,   Amphihelia  ramea    Muil.,   Balanophyllia  parvula   Mos. 

Station  253.  5°4S'.2S.,  I32°i3'  E.  304  M.  Trochocyathus  caryophylloides  n.  sp.,  Flabellum  irregu- 
lare?  Semper. 

STATION  256.  5°26'.6S.,  I32°32'.5E.  397  M.  Caryophyllia  clavus  var.  transversalis  Mos.,  Cerato- 
trochus venustus  n.  sp.,  Faracyathus  Agassizii  Duncan,  Deltocyathus  lens  n.  sp.,  Stephanophyllia  formosissima 
Mos.,   Stephanophyllia  complicata  Mos. 

STATION  259.  5°29'.2S.,  I32°52'.5E.  487  M.  Sclerohelia  formosa  Alc,  Desmophyllum  crista-galli 
E.   &  H.,   Lochmccotrochus  oculeits  n.  sp.,  Pourtalosmilia  dumosa  n.  sp.,   Caryophyllia  sp.,  Amphihelia  sp. 

Station  262.   $°53'.SS.,   132°  48'. SE.   560  M.   Odontocyathus}  sp. 


47 

Station  266.  5°56'.5S.,  1320 4 f. 7  E.  595  M.  Coenopsammia  profunda  Pourt. 

Station  267.  5°54'    S.,  i32°56'.7E.  984  M.  Amphihelia  oculata  L. 

Station  275.  4°52'.5S.,   i28°37'     E.  Banda  Sea,  4914  M.  Deltocyathus  lens  n.  sp. 

STATION  284.  8° 43'.  1  S.,    i27°i6'.7E.    Arafura   Sea.  828   M.    Stephanotrochus    Weberianus\  Flabellum 
laciniatum  Phil.  var.  messutn,  Stephanophyllia  formosissima  Mos.  var. 

STATION  297.    iO°39'     S.,    I23°40'E.    Off    the    Sahul     Bank,    South    of    Timor,    520  M.    Amphihelia 
oculata  L.,  Bathyactis  Sibogce  11.  sp.,  Balanophyllia  cornu  Mos.,   Thecopsammia  gemma  Mos. 

STATION   302.    iO°27'.9S.,    I23°28'.7E.   216  M.   Stephanophyllia  formosissima  Mos. 

Station  314.     7°  36'     S.,   ii7°3o'.8E.  694  M.  Flabellum  laciniatum  Phil.,  var.  messutn. 

S  1'ation   316.   70  i9'.4  S.,   1 16°49'.5  E.  Neighbourhood  of  Paternoster  Is.  538  M.  Flabellum  australe':  Mos 


48 


V.   LIST  OF  THE  SPECIES  OF  DEEP-SEA 
MADREPORARIA  OF  THE  SIBOGA  COLLECTION. 


MADREPORARIA    APOROSA. 
I.    Family  Tureinolid^e. 


I.  Caryophyllia. 

i.  C.  cultrifera  n.  sp. 

2.  C.  scobinosa  n.  sp. 

3.  C.   panda    n.  sp. 

4.  C.  ephyala    Alc. 

5.  C. ?  clavus  Scacchi. 

6.  C.  transversalis  Mos 

7.  C.  quadragenaria  n.  sp 

8.  Caryophyllia?  sp.    . 


II.  Ceratotrochus. 


1.  C.  venustus  n.  sp. 

2.  Ceratotrochus  sp. 

3.  Ceratotrochus  sp. 


III.  Conotrochus. 

1.   C.   funicolumna  n.  sp. 

IV.  Phloeocyathus. 

1.   P.   hospes  n.  sp_ 


V.  Lochmaeotrochus. 


1.  L.  oculeus  n.  sp. 


VI.  Cyathoceras. 
1.  C.  Tydemani  n.  sp. 


.  .  101  .  . 

.  45  &  102  . 

.  .  177  .  . 

59,  95  &  251 
95,  100  &  259 

.  12  &  256  . 
90,  251  (&  289) 

.  .  159  .  . 


\6    . 


102 
'59 


95  &  100 


150 


159  &  259. 


95  &  105  . 


Page. 


7 
8 

9 
9 
9 
9 
10 

7 


10 
10 
10 


1 1 


12 


'3 


H 


I. 
I. 
I. 


I. 


II. 


II. 


Figuie. 

1,  I  a. 

2,  2a. 

3,  3*- 


4,  40. 


5.  S«- 


6,  6  a. 


8,  Sa. 


9,  ga. 


7>  7a- 


49 


VII.  Trochocyathus. 

i.  T.  caryophylloides  n.  sp. 
2.  T.   pilcus  n.   sp. 


VIII.  Thecocyathus. 


i.  T.   rhombocolumna   n.  sp. 
2.  T.  virgatus  n.  sp.   . 

IX.  Tropidocyathus. 
i.  T.   Lessoni   Mich.    . 


X.  Paracyathus. 


i.  P.  Agassizi  Duncan. 

2.  P.  pruinosus  n.  sp. 


XI.  Deltocyathus. 


1.  D.  italicus   Mich 

2.  D.  lens  n.  sp 

3.  D.  magnificus    Mos. 

,.  ,,  var.  suluensis 

4.  D.  fragilis  n.  sp 


XII.  Citharocyathus. 


1.  C.  conicus  n.  sp. 

2.  C.   venustus  n.  sp. 


XIII.  Odontocyathus. 


[.O.  sexradiis  n.  sp. 

2.  ( )dontocyathus  sp. 

3.  O.   stella  n.  sp.    . 


XIV.  Stephanotrochus. 

1.  S.   weberianus  n.  sp.    . 

2.  S.   Sibogae  n.   sp 


XV.  Sabinotrochus. 

1.   S.  fiatiliseptis  n.  sp.    . 


XVI.  Discotrochus. 


1.  D.  dentatus  n.  sp. 

2.  Discotrochus  sp. 


251,   253   (&   91 
•    •     95     •     • 


•     •     95     ■ 

.  105  (&  96) 


.      59  (49*,  260,  289). 


256 

(96) 


45,  95,  100  &  251 
59,  95,  256  &  275 
.  95,  166?  (&  96)  . 
.  .  95  &  100  .  . 
.     .     .     45     .     .     . 


95 
59 


156 
262 
159 


284   (and    173 
.     .     88     . 


21 1 


2.   S.   bipatella  n.  sp ....      52 


95,  90   &    100 
•     ■     95     •     • 


M 

15 


16 
16 


'7 


18 
18 


19 
19 

20 
20 
21 


22 

22 


23 
24 
24 


25 
25 


26 

27 


27 
27 


l'hllr 

II. 

II. 


II. 
II. 


II. 


III. 


II. 


II. 


III. 
III. 


III. 


III. 


III. 
III. 


IV. 
IV. 


IV. 


I  I  III 

10,  10  a. 

11 .  [  ia. 


12. 

'3- 


14,   14  a. 


17,    17  a. 


16,   16a. 


15,   15*. 


18,  18*. 

19,  iga. 


20,  20 ei,  b. 

21,  2\a,   b. 


22,  22*. 

23,  23*. 


24,  24*. 

25,  25*. 


26,    26a. 


>IBi  IG  V-EXPEDITIE    XVI  (7. 


;o 


XVII.  Desmophyllum. 


1.  D.  crista-galli   E.   &  H. 

2.  D.  alabastrum  n.  sp.   . 

3.  Desmophyllum  sp.  .     . 


XVIII.  Flabellum. 


Station. 


1.  F.   distinctum  E.  &  H.    .     .     . 

2.  F.  lamellulosum  n.  sp.     .     .     . 

3.  F.  australe,   Mos 

Flabellum  sp.  (?  australe   Mos.). 

4.  F.  latum  Studer 


3- 


F.  laciniatum   Phil.   var.   messum. 


•  ?59    • 
95   &    105 

•  95     • 


12  (51  &  1 66) 
.  .  251  .  . 
.  .  251  .  . 
.  38,  216  . 
.  .  105  .  . 
45,  284  &  314 


6.  F.  suluense  n.  sp .     .     .     .    100    .     . 

7.  F.  irregulare  Semper ...    253  (49^)    . 

8.  F.  dens  n.  sp ....     95      .     . 

9.  F.  japonicum   Mos .     .      17,    18   &   212 


XIX.  Placotrochus. 


I.   P.  candeanus   E.  &  H. 


XX.  Placotrochides. 

1.  P.  dentiformis  n.  sp.  . 

2.  P.  scaphula  n.  sp.  . 


12 


59 

212 


Page. 

Plate. 

28 

28 

IV. 

28 

3° 

30 

IV. 

30 

31 

— 

31 

— 

3i 

— 

31 

IV. 

32 

— 

IV. 

32 

33 

— 

1  -> 
33 

IV. 

34 

IV. 

Figure. 


27,  27  a. 


28,  28  a,  b. 


29,  29  a,  />. 
30,   300. 


3'-   31"- 


II.   Family  Oculixid.k. 


I.  Amphihelia. 


1.  A.  oculata  L. 

2.  A.  ramea  Muil.  . 

3.  A.  arbuscula  Mos. 

4.  A.  tenuis   Mos.   . 


II.  Sclerohelia. 


i.  S.  formosa  Alc. 


.  267  &   297  . 

95,    156  &  251 

■  12,  95,    156. 

•     •     95      •     • 


259 


35 

35 

— 

35 

— 

36 

36 

III.    Family   Astk.eid.e. 


I.  Pourtalosmilia. 
!.   P.   dumosa  n.  sp ...     156,   259 


V. 


5i 

MADREPORARIA    FUNGIDA. 
I.     Family   LoPHOSERID  E. 


I.  Bathyactis. 

i.  B.  symmetrica   Pourt. 

2.  B.  stephana  Alc.     . 

3.  B.  Sibog;u  n.  sp.     . 

4.  B.  palifera  n.  sp.     . 

II.  Cycloseris. 

1.   Cycloseris  sp. 


I 


Stutïon. 


12,   l8,  59,95,   I/S,  2oS,  241. 

...    88  (49a?)    .     .     . 

•      95?   '59-    175.  297      . 
.     .     .     98,   153     .     .     . 


100 


Page. 

Plate. 

37 

38 

— 

38 

38 

V. 

39 

I 


34.   34  «• 


MADREPORARIA  PERFORATA. 
I.    Family  Eupsammid.k 


I.  Stephanophyllia. 

1.  S.   formosissima  Mos.  . 

S.   formosissima   Mos.   var. 

2.  S.  complicata   Mos. 

3.  S.   fungulus  n.  sp.  . 

II.  Balanophyllia. 


1.  B.  cornu   Mos.     . 

2.  B.  parvula  Mos. 

3.  Balanophyllia  sp. 

4.  Balanophyllia  sp. 


III.  Thecopsammia. 


1.   T.  gemma  Mos. 
3.  T.  fistula  n.  sp. 


IV.  Coenopsammia. 


1.  C.   profunda  Pourt. 

2.  C.  amphelioides  n. 

3.  C.  pusilla  n.  sp. 


sp. 


95,  177,  256  &  302 
.  .  45  &  284  .  . 
.  .  59  &  256  .  . 
.  .  .  100  .  .  . 


297 
251 
107 
59 


•  297  . 
105  &  107 


.  266  . 

156  &  177 

•  95  ■ 


39 

39 

— 

40 

— 

40 

V. 

41 

41 

— 

41 

4i 

42 

42 

V. 

43 

43 

V. 

44 

V. 

35.  35*.  b- 


36,  16  a. 


37  >   37 «• 
38,  38rt. 


CONTENTS. 


Page 

I.    Introduction I 

II.    List  of  Authors   consulted 4 

III.  Systematic   Account  of  the  Siboga  Deep-Sea  Madreporaria 7 

IV.  List  of  the   Localities  where  the  Siboga   Keep-Sea  Madreporaria  were  dredged 45 

V.    List  of  the  Species  of  Deep-Sea  Madreporaria  of  the  Siboga   Collection 4S 

VI.    Plates 53 


EXPLANATION  OF  PLATES. 


Siboga -Expeditie. XVTa  A.  Alcock.Deep  -  Sea    Madreporaria . 


2axs. 


3ax2. 


6ax2. 


1 .  Cary ophyUia    oultrifera ,  A . A . 

3 .  Caiyo  phyïïia   p  anda ,  A .  A . 

5 .  Ceratotroclms    vernist-us ,  A  A . 


2.  CaryophyUia     sadbinosa  A  A. 

4.  CaryopHyUia    cpiadragertariaA  A. 

6.  Ceratotroehras  (CYmotroclnas)  fhrricoin  mna  AA, 


CCHowdliar 


7.  Cyatlioceras  iydemairi  ,  A  A . 


PLATE  I. 

Fig.  i,    ia.  Caryophyllia  cultrifera.  x  2. 

Fig.  2,   2a.   Caryophyllia  scobinosa.   x  2. 

Fig.  3'   3#-   Caryophyllia  panda,  x  2. 

Fig.  4.  Caryophyllia  quadragenaria.   x  21/,. 

Fig.  _p7.         Caryophyllia  quadragenaria.   x  3. 

Fig.  5,   5#.   Ceratotrochus  venustus.  x  4. 

Fig.  6,   6«.   Ceratotrochus  (Conotrochus)  funicolumna. 

Fig.  7.  Cyathoceras  Tydemani.   x  3. 

Pig.  ja.        Cyathoceras  Tydemani.   x  4. 


Siboga- Expeditie  XVIa  A.  Alcock  Deep-  Sea    Madreporaiia 


n. 


12x4. 


13X4 


\"^     15axa*/è. 


tt.  (Vratotroolnis    Phloeooyatlms  :  UospeN ,  A.A. 
10  Tri >< 'lux rya tlms    caxyopLyllioideN ,  A.  A . 
12 .  Tlieoocyattnis   rlLombooolumna ,  A .  A . 
14.  Tropidocyathtis   Lessoni    Micli. 


9.  LoribmaeotroolniS     oculeus,  A.A. 
H.Ti'cii'liiM'yiilLnis    pileiis,  A.A. 
13 .  TkeoocyatlniN    viréattLS  .A.A. 
15.  DeJ.tooyath.us    fragüis  A.A 


16  1  >  eltocyatlius    lens. A.A. 


PLATE  II. 

Fio-.      8.  Ceratotrochus  (Phlceocyathus)  hospes,   x  3. 

Fig.      Sa.  Ceratotrochus  (Phloeocyathus)  hospes,   x  4. 

Fig.      9.  Lochmeeotrochus  oculeus :  natural  size. 

Fio-.      ga.  Lochmseotrochus  oculeus.   x  4. 

Fig.  10,    10a.   Trochocyathus  caryophyllioides.   x  2. 

Fig.  11,    ii«.  Trochocyathus  pileus.  x  3. 

Fio-.  12.  Trochocyathus  (Thecocyathus)  rhombocolumna.   x  4. 

Fio-.  13.  Trochocyathus  (Thecocyathus)  virgatus.   x  4. 

Fio-.  14,    14a.  Trochocyathus  (Tropidocyathus)  Lessoni.    x  21/,. 

Fig.  15,    15^.   Deltocyathus  fragilis.    >    21   . 

Fig.  16,    \6a.   Deltocyathus  lens.        6. 


Siboga-  Expeditie  XVIa  A.ALooclt.  Deep  -  Sea   Madreporaria. 


m. 


18ax*. 


18x4. 


21  xa. 


lbx  2 


17.  Paracyathus    pruiaosns,  AA. 
19.  Citharocyathus  ventistus,  A.A. 
21.0dontocyattnis    stella.A.A. 


18.  Citharoey-athus    conicTis.A.A. 
20.  Odontoi/yatlms    sexradiis.A.A. 
22.  Stephanotrochus   weberianus,  A.A. 


CChowa  .-.;■,  §,S  C.W        I        Le 


23.  Steplianotroclms     Siboéae.A.A. 


PLATE  III. 

Fig.  17,  \~a.             Paracyathus  pruinosus.  X  2. 

Fig.  18,  iSrt.             Citharocyathus  conicus.    ■    4. 

Fig.  19,  19^.             Citharocyathus  venustus.  X  4. 

Fig.  20,  2cw,  20/;.   Odontocyathus  sexradiis :   natural  size. 

Fig.  21,  2iff,  21/;.   Odontocyathus  stella.  X  2. 

Fig.  22,  22a.             Stephanotrochus  weberianus :   natural  size. 

Fig.  23,  23a.             Stephanotrochus  Sibogee  :   natura!  size. 


Sibo6>a    Expeditie. XVIa  A.Alcock    Deep-  Sea   Madreporaria. 


IV. 


6x2%. 


ZGaxa1*. 


29axi'/4. 


29bxiVii. 


28a 


30ax3V2 


31ax4 


32xs 


32ax5. 


24.Sabiaotrocliixs  flatüiseptis,  A.A. 
26.Discotrocliiis    dentatus.  A.A. 
28.Flabellum  lameïhilo  sum , A.A. 
:«).  Fla"beHnm   deus.  A.A. 


25.  SaTrinotroclms    TnpateHaA.A 
27.  Desmopixylkuii   alaTmstrum.A.A. 
29.Fla~beIh.niL  snlueiise,  AA. 
31.  Plaootrotüiides  dentiformis.A.A. 


32.  Placotrooüdes    seaplrala.A.A 


..,!,-.! 


PLATE  IV. 

Sabinotrochus   flatiliseptis.  X   2. 

Sabinotrochus  bipatella.  x  3. 

Discotrochus  dentatus.    •    2 

Desmophyllum  alabastrum.    •    2. 

Desmophyllum   alabastrum.        4. 
Fig.    28,    28^,    2%è.    Flabellum   lamellulosum  :   natura/  si  ze. 
Fig.    29,    29a,    29/'.    Flabellum   suluense.  >    i1 ;,. 


Placotrochicles  dentiformis.  X  4. 
Placotrochides  scaphula.  x  5. 


tig. 

^4- 

24a 

Fig. 

25, 

25^ 

Fig. 

26, 

26a 

Fig. 

27. 

Fig-. 

2Jrt 

Fig. 

30, 

30a 

Fig. 

3i, 

3" 

Fig. 

32, 

32« 

Siboëa.- Expeditie. XVIa  A.ALcock:.  Deep-  Sea    Madreporaria .. 


v: 


33ax5 


34ax  a. 


36ax* 


35b  x4 


35  a  x  4 


35  x  4. 


37axe 


33 .  Poui-talosmilia    dumosa.AA. 
35.  Stephanopliyüia  fungulus, AA. 
37.  Coenopsanunia   amplielioides, A.A. 


341.  Bathyaetis    palifera,  AA. 
36.  TKecopsaminia    fistula.A.A. 
38  .  Coenopsaimnia   puHÜLa.AA. 


38x2 


38axs 


<'.  §.A.C.Chowdiiaiy.del. 


PLATE  V. 

Pourtalosmilia  dumosa  :   natural  size. 
Pourtalosmilia  dumosa.  x  5. 
Bathyactis  palifera.  x  2. 
35^.   Stephanophyllia   fungulus.   x  4. 

Balanophyllia  (Thecopsammia)  fistula  :  natural  size. 
Balanophyllia  (Thecopsammia)  fistula.  x  4. 
Dendrophyllia   (Coenopsammia)  amphelioides  :   natural  size. 
Fig-    37a-  Dendrophyllia  (Coenopsammia)  amphelioides.  x  6. 

Dendrophyllia  (Coenopsammia)   pusilla.   x  2. 
Dendrophyllia  (Coenopsammia)  pusilla.  x  8. 


Fig. 

Fig. 

lla 

Fig. 

34, 

34a. 

Fig. 

35, 

35«, 

Fig. 

36. 

Fig. 

2,6a 

Fig. 

-,7- 

Fig. 

37« 

Fig. 

38. 

Fig. 

38a. 

Aow.lEZ 


, .  :  :  i 


RÈSULTATS  DES  EXPLORATIONS 
ZOOLOGIQUES,  BOTANIQUES,  OCEANOGRAPHIQUES  ET  GEOLOGIQUES 

KNTKEP&ISES    AUX 
ÏNIH'S   NÉEBLAUDAISES    OWESTAlBS   •  'il    1899 — 190Ü, 

a    bord    du    8IBOGA 

SOUS    I.E    COMMAN1IEMKNT   DE 

G.  F.  TYDEMAN 

*  11  BLIES    PAK 

M   A.  yL      W  É  lï  IC  II 

('hef  ilc  l'eipédition: 

*I.  Introduction  et  descriptïon  de  l'expcdition,   Max  Weber'. 
*I1.  Le  bateau  et  soo  équipement  scientificnie, S.  F.  Tydéman. 

III.  Résultats  biydrographiques,  G.  F.  Tydeman. 

IV.  Foraminitera. 

V.  Railiiihii'ia.   M.   11  art  in  an  n. 

VI.  Porifera,  G.  C.  J.  Vosm'aer  et  J.  H.  VernhouL 
VII.  Hydropolypi,  ('h.  .lul in. 
VIII.  Hydrocorallinae,  S.  J.  Iliekson. 
IX.  Siphonophora,  Miles  Lens  et  van  Riemsdijk. 
X.  llvdruiuediisae,  O.  Maas. 
XI.  Scyphomednsae,  O.  Maas. 
XII.  Ctenophora,   Ml'e  V.  Moser. 
•Xlll.  Gorgonidae,  Alcyonidae,  J.  Versluys1). 
XIV.  Pennatulidae,  S.  .1.   Hiekson. 
XV.  Aetiniaiïa,  P.   Me  Murrich. 
*XVI.  Madreporaria,  A.  Alcoek  ')  et  L.  Düderlein. 
Wil.  Antipatharia,  P.  N.  van  Kampen. 
X  V II I .  Turhellaria,  L.  v  o  n    G  r  a  f  f  et  R.  R.   v  o  u  S  t  u  m  m  e  r. 
XIX.  Cestodes,  J.  W.  Spengel. 
XX.  Nematodes,    A.  A.   W.   Uubrecht. 
XXI.  Chaetognatha,  &.  H.  Rowler. 
XXII.  Nemertim,    \.  A,  W.  Hub'recht. 
XXIII.  Myzostomidaè,  1>'.  K.  vod  Stuiumer. 
XXIV,;.  Polychaeta  errantia,  R.  Horst. 
XXIV*.  Polychaeta  sedentaria,   M.  Caullery  et  F.  Mesnil. 
XXV.  Gcp'hvrea.  ('.   Ph.  .Sluiter. 
XXVI.  Enteropneusta,  J.  W.  Spengel. 
XXVII.  Brachiopodaj  J.   I'.  van    Hem  melen. 
XXVIII.  Bryozoa,   S.  F.  Harmcr. 
XXIX.  Copepoda,  A.  Scott. 
XXX.  Ostracoda,  G.  W.  Muller. 
XXXI.  Cirrhipedia,  P.  P.  C.  Hoek. 
XXXII.'.  Isopoda,  II.  .1.  Flansen. 
XXXIli.  Epicaridae,  J.  Bon  nier. 

XXXIII.  Amphipoda,  J.  Bonnier. 

XXXIV.  Caprellidac,  P.  Mayer. 
XXXV.  Stomatnpoda,  II.  .T.  Ilansen. 

XXXVI.  Leptostraca,  H.  J.  Hansen. 
XXXVII.  Schizopoda,  H.  J.   Hansen. 
XXXVIII.  Sergestidae,  II.  3.  Hansen. 
XXXIX.  Decapoda,  J.  G.  de  Man. 
XL.  Pantepoda,  J.  C.  C'.  Lu  man. 
XLI.  Halobatidae,  J.  Th.  Ou  de  mans. 
X  L 1 1 .  Crinoidea,  h.  D  ö  d  e  r  1  e  i  n  p    p, 
XLIII.  Eehinoidea,  J.  C.  H.  de  Me  ver  e. 
s.XLIV.  Holothnrioidéa,  C'.  Ph.  Sluiter. 
XLV.  Ophiuroidea,  R.  Kohier. 
XL VI.  Asteroidea,  L.  Düderlein. 
«XLVH.  Solenogastres,  IL   F.  Nierstrasz. 
XLVIII.  Chitouidai',  II.  F.  Nierstrasz. 
XLIX.  Prosobraiii'liia,   M.   M.  Sc  liep  man. 
L.  Opisthobranchia,  R.  Bergh. 
LI.  Heteropoda,  J.  J.  Tesch. 
LIL  Ptcropoda,  J.  J.  Tesch. 
LHI.  Lamellibranchiata.  P.  I'elseneer  et  Ph.  Dantzenbc  rg. 
LIV.  Scaphopoda. 
LV.  Cephalopoda,  L.  Joubin. 
LVI.  Tunicata,   C.   Ph.  Sluiter. 
LV1I.  Pisces,  Max    Weber. 
LVin.  Cetacea,  Max  Weber. 
L1X.  Liste  des  algaes,  M"11'   A.   Weber. 
*LX.  Halimeda,  M«e  E.  S.  Barton.  (Mme  E.  s.  Gepp)'. 
LXI.  Melobesieae,  Mme  A.  Weber  et  VI.  E' o  si  ie. 
LXII.  Diuuflagellata.  Coecosphaeridae,  J.  P.   Lotsy, 
LXIII.  Diatomaceae,  J.  P.  Lutsy. 
LXIV.  Deposita  marina,  O.  li.  Böggild. 
LXV.  Résultats  géologiques,  A.  Wichmanu. 


Siboga-Expeditie 


REPORT  ON  THE 

SEA  IADRHP  OMBIi  OF  TEE  10GHXPEDITIOH 


BY 


A.    ALCOCK,    M.B.,  LL.D.,  F.R.S. 


With  five  plates 


Monographie  XVI  a  ol 


UITKOMSTEN  OP  ZOOLOGISCH, 
BOTANISCH,  OCEANOGRAPHISCH  EN  GEOLOGISCH  GEBIED 

verzameld  in  Nederlandsen    Oost-Indië    1S99 — 1900 

aan    boord    H.   M.    Siboga    onder    commando    van 
Luitenant  ter  zee   ie  kl.  G.  F.  TYDEMAN 

UITGEGEVEN    DOOR 

Dr.  MAX  WEBER 

Prof.  in   Amsterdam,  Leider  der  Expeditie 


(met  medewerking  van  de  Maatschappij  ter  bevordering  van  het  Natuurkundig 
onderzoek  der  Nederlandsche  Koloniën) 


BOEKHANDEL  EN  DRUKKERIJ 

VOOKHKKN 

E.  J.  BRILL 

LEIDEN 


iiiuiiiiiiiiiiiudm ui.iiiiiiH 


Publié  Aoüt  1902 


#   Les  numéros  avec  un  astérique  oat  déja  parü;  ceux  marqués   l)  seulement  en   partie. 


Voor   de    uitgave    van   de  resultaten  der  Siboga-Expeditie  hebben 
bijdragen   beschikbaar  gesteld: 

De    Maatschappij    ter    bevordering    van    het    Natuurkundig    Onderzoek    der   Nederlandsche 
Koloniën. 

Het  Ministerie  van  Koloniën. 

Het  Ministerie  van  Binnenlandsche  Zaken. 

Het  Koninklijk  Zoologisch  Genootschap   «Natura  Artis  Magistra"  te  Amsterdam. 

De   »Oostersche  Handel  en  Reederij"  te  Amsterdam. 

De  Heer  B.   H.  de  Waal,  Consul-Generaal  der  Nederlanden  te  Kaapstad. 


CONDITIONS  GÉNÉRALES  DE  VENTE. 


i°.   L'ouvrage  du   „Siboga"  se  composera  d'une  série  de  monographies. 

2°.  Ces  monographies  paraitront  au  fur  et  a  mesure  qu'elles  seront  prêtes. 

3°.  Le  prix  de  chaque  monographie  sera  différent,  mais  nous  avons  adopté  comme  base  générale  du  prix  de 
vente:  pour  une  feuille  d'impression  sans  fig.  flor.  0.15;  pour  une  feuille  avec  fig.  flor.  0.20  a  0.25  ; 
pour  une  planche   noire  flor.   0.25  ;   pour  une  planche  coloriée  flor.  0.40. 

4°.  Il  y  aura  deux  modes  de  souscription : 

a.  La  souscription  a  l'ouvrage  complet. 

b.  La  souscription  a  des  monographies  séparées  en  nombre  restreint. 
Dans  ce  dernier  cas,  le  prix  des  monographies  sera  majoré  de   25  °/0. 

5°.  L'ouvrage  sera  réuni  en  volumes  avec  titres  et  index.  Les  souscripteurs  a  l'ouvrage  complet  recevront 
ces  titres  et  index,  au  fur  et  a  mesure  que  chaque  volume  sera  complet. 


Déja  paru: 

ie  Livraison.  (Monographie  XLIV)  C.  Ph.  Sluiter.  Die  Holothurien  der  Siboga-Expedition.   Mit   10  Taf. 

ƒ  7-5° 
Pour  les  souscripteurs  a  l'ouvrage  complet.      T   6. — 

2c  Livraison.  (Monographie   LX)  E.  S.  Barton.    The  genus  Halimeda.  With  4  plates /  2.40 

Pour  les  souscripteurs  a  l'ouvrage  complet.      „    1.80 

3c  Livraison.  (Monographie   I)    Max  Weber.    Introduction  et  description  de  1'expedition.  Avec  Liste   des 

Stations  et  2  Cartes f  g. — 

Pour  les  souscripteurs  a  l'ouvrage  complet.     „   6.75 

4e  Livraison.  (Monographie  II)  G.  F.  Tydeman.   Description  of  the  ship  and  appliances  used  for  scientific 

exploration.  With   3  plates  and  illustrations ƒ  2.50 

Pour  les  souscripteurs  a  l'ouvrage  complet.     „   2. — 

5e  Livraison.  (Monographie  XLVII)  H.  F.  Nierstrasz.   The  Solenogastres  of  the  Siboga-Expedition.  With 

six  plates ƒ  4.90 

Pour  les  souscripteurs  a  l'ouvrage  complet.      „   3.90 

6e  Livraison.  (Monographie  XIII)  J.  Versluys.   Die  Gorgoniden  der  Siboga-Expedition. 

I.    Die   Chrysogorgiidae ƒ  3.75 

Pour  les  souscripteurs  a  l'ouvrage  complet.     „    3. —